Tuesday, December 16, 2014

NaNo is Over but Your Writing JuJu has Just Begun

In the spirit of NaNo past I wanted to focus this month’s article on “how to take it with you.” For those of you who don’t know, NaNoWriMo stands for National Novel Writer’s Month where the challenge is to write 50,000 words in the month of November. If you haven’t done it before I suggest you do!

My personal NaNo story is – I had been working on my first novel for 15 years, yup that’s correct. But I hadn’t really... What that means is I’d work on it feverishly for a few months and then put it away for years, then work on it again for a bit and so on and so forth. After I joined a writer’s group people would ask me “what are you working on” and I would tell them. Then they’d ask “how far are you? Or “when will you be done?” or something else along those lines and I’d have to admit I’d been working on it forever. Last year a group member said to me, “Why don’t you just finish it? NaNo is next month, finish it then.” I had never heard of NaNo and just hearing this woman I didn’t know tell me to “just do it” was the push I needed to get it done.

I joined NaNo in 2013 and wrote my first novel. This year (November 2014) I joined again and wrote the prequel. Are they “finished finished”? No. But each of them are over 50,000 words and I am rewriting. So what makes a writer actually sit down and write? That’s the question I found myself asking. And there are a lot of answers, for most people there are different things and different reasons. The one issue that is undeniable however is consistency. When you take any writing challenge you HAVE to produce. Let’s say you set a goal to write 5,000 words a week. You do the math and find out that’s 715 words a day and then, no matter what, you make that happen. If you’re too tired when you get home from work you sit down and write anyway. If you have a lunch break, you write during lunch. Sometimes I take out my laptop in my car (not while driving) and write there. The one thing I’ve found that’s more important than anything else is forming that habit and NaNo did that for me, it formed my daily writing habit.

So much so, that this past week I wrote over 11,000 words on my third novel. The one thing I can now say is that it gets easier and I’ve heard this over and over again. Once you get into the habit and once you get the hang of doing something new that you’ve never done before it begins to flow. Just like when you’re exercising a new part of your body and your muscles are stiff and don’t stretch as much or as well. The more you practice/stretch/shoot hoops, the easier it becomes.

Figure out what works for you writing wise and don’t make the number something so high you cannot achieve it. Make it achievable. Start with 1,000 words a week if you need to, that’s 143 words a day. This blog post is over 500 words and I wrote it in 15 minutes (not including editing), just to give you an idea… Once you’ve hit your 1,000 words a week, up it in small enough increments you won’t fail and you won’t feel overwhelmed. Forming that daily writing habit seems to be more important for people than trying to eek out writing sprints once a week. Plus you won’t have to go back and read what you wrote because yesterday’s scene is still fresh in your mind. I loved reading that Neil Gaiman wrote a chunk of his book Coraline by writing 50 words a night before bed instead of reading. The take away? Just do it - daily!

Friday, October 31, 2014

Lock Picking – A Personal Guide to Book Research

Lock Picking – A Practical Personal Guide to Book Research
By Raina Schell

“Write about what you know and care deeply about. When one puts one’s self on paper — that is what is called good writing.” ~Joel Chandler Harris

I’m no expert but I do know that when you write a book and/or character, a lot of research has to go into it to make it believable. For example, one author I spoke to recently used firearms in her book so she took shooting lessons. This is what we, as responsible writers, do – strive for authenticity.  More so, this is what we wake in the morning itching to do…

Researching is one of my favorite aspects of writing, it makes me giddy inside.

Elisabetta (Lizzy) Moretti, the 23 year old Sicilian woman who is the protagonist in my Destiny Series was born on paper over 15 years ago. Lizzy evolved again and again over the past years that I’ve been writing her and she continues to evolve but one thing has remained the same, Lizzy is a thief. She wasn’t born a thief but she fell in with the “wrong crowd” somewhere along the way, you’ll have to read the book to find out the nitty gritty of how and why; and she was well trained.




When Lizzy learned how to lock pick I learned how to lock pick. I watched youtube videos for hours and hours and because I didn’t have a lock picking set (yet) I made my first picks out of paper clips. I then proceeded to pick every lock in my house. Within a week I could pick the deadbolt on my front door with a paper clip (actually 2 paper clips as one is used as the tension wrench) in under 30 seconds. No, this did not make me feel safe but it did make me feel quite accomplished. That’s when I realized I’ve always been a lock picker. It started when I was a wee tot and would pick the bathroom locks with broken off Q-tips, the cardboard ones, not the plastic ones. I didn’t understand the mechanism of a lock (tumblers and the shear line) then but I still had the innate ability to do it. Maybe it’s because I was locked in my room without food for days as a child, true story. Or maybe it’s because when I set my mind to do something I do it. Persistence-are-us. Who knows why? It doesn’t really matter.

What matters is throwing yourself headlong into that research. Almost as if you’re an actor and you’re method acting. You become your character. Lock picking can even be a metaphor for whatever it is you need to learn in order for your character to be believable and well rounded. You could go into your story and character development giving them a skill you have already mastered, one you’ve always wanted to learn or one you knew as a child but forgot somewhere along the way.

What I’ve learned from writing thus far is that a majority of it crawls up from the deepest, darkest hidden parts of ourselves, clawing and scratching its way to the surface in order to forever stain the whiteness of screen or paper.







Monday, September 29, 2014

What is the Perfect Writer’s Coffee Shop?


The month before last I spent 10 days in Texas. Ten glorious days. Before I left I was in a funk, a funk so deep that I could not seem to pull myself out of it. Simply put, I’d lost my mojo, my motivation, my eternal optimism, my joie de vivre. I walked around day in and day out in a foul mood, grumbling and complaining to anyone who would listen and to those who would not. I didn’t want to be at work helping people, I didn’t want to be writing my novel, I didn’t want to do much of anything at all. This is how it was when I flew into Austin Texas one hot and humid Sunday afternoon. The woman I was staying with, a lovely airbnb/er named Shelly, met me at a local seafood restaurant and took me out to dinner. The crawfish étouffée was the marked beginning of the change.

Epoch Coffee, Austin Texas
 The next day I walked to the café nearest to her house and this is where I discovered Nirvana in Texas. Epoch Coffee was/is the most amazingly perfect writing café I have yet to find in all of my many journeys both home and abroad. I spent the entire day sitting outside on the sun-dappled patio, writing to my heart’s content. Inspiration seemed to fly out of the rafters, alighting my fingers, soaring over the keyboard, a dove in flight. I sat on that magical patio all day long and wrote, really wrote. Characters bloomed, plot expounded, it felt like I was making my own personal history sitting there at Epoch, which was truly living up to its name.

Epoch's Patio


So what makes the perfect writer’s coffee shop? I will be the first to admit, the coffee has to be good, or tea or whatever you’re drinking. I don’t drink coffee on a regular basis but at Epoch I drank their coffee and it was simply, phenomenal. However, that’s not what made the experience so meaningful and ripe. Epoch truly had everything I have ever looked for in the “perfect writing coffee shop”. The outdoor patio was large and open, the weather perfect. The view was not “crazy good” but somehow it was heart opening. 





Photo by Raina Schell

I could stare across the street for a few minutes to regroup between scenes and find inspiration in the wild grass and trees that grew there, unencumbered. How can one find inspiration from perfectly manicured lawns? The patio was on the street but it wasn’t a busy street so there were barely any cars driving by and the patio itself was raised up a few steps from the sidewalk as though there was a firm barrier between “them” and “us”. The perfect coffee shop must have good, soft seats with adequate back support and still I have yet to find one with seats as perfect as Epoch. An essential detail that did not go unnoticed is that this enlightened coffee shop incorporates outlets into the railing where each table is nestled. Not everyone likes quiet but I do. I don’t like music when I write or loud conversations and Epoch outside offered exactly that. There were people talking but the tables are not crowded against one another so unless I focused on trying to hear them, I could not.

Epoch's Patio

Sitting blissfully at Epoch, I did choose to overhear a significant conversation. A 20 something guy was dating a new girl. He had moved into a new house with roommates as well and was bemoaning one roommate in particular for having “big dreams”. I didn’t interrupt though I wanted to. I wanted to tell him that big dreams are the spark of the future. Big dreams keep us going sometimes when nothing else can. And most importantly, big dreams can come true - for without them we have no dreams at all, nothing to strive for and no accomplishments on the horizon. Dream big and if you fail at least you’ve tried. I said none of this as I pretended to write or at that moment, read and not look like I was listening. This guy sounded like he had lost something too, his own personal spark so I could relate. He was stuck, he didn’t know what the future held and he was feeling despondent and somewhat negative. But he’d met a girl recently and when his friend asked him what he liked about her he responded, “She loves life, she sees everything with fresh eyes, she’s always happy. Being around her reminds me to look at the joy in life.” That hit a chord. That’s how I’d been before I fell into my, let’s be honest here, 2 year funk. Maybe, I thought, that’s how everyone is before they wake up one day to find that their dreams have passed them by.
Epoch's Signage


Since my return to California I’ve been on the search for the “perfect writer’s coffee shop” and I have yet to find it. I’ve looked in SF, Marin County and the East Bay. Next month I will try L.A. If you know of a hidden gem anywhere in the world that fits the criteria above – a high bar set by Epoch… please let me and other readers know as soon as possible, we will all be eternally grateful.

Saturday, September 20, 2014

Romance Writers Facebook Tag

I was tagged by Kayla Hampton to take part in a romance writers Facebook tag. Thank you Kayla! @HamptonBooks
Here’s how it goes:
You write 7 lines from your current work in progress, starting with the seventh line on the seventh page.
This is from my novel Exquisite Destiny, (a paranormal romance). This is Book 2 in the projected 5 book series. I hope to have the first 2 novels out by the Spring of 2015.

The juncture froze in the same way that time stands still the instant before a near death impact. 
When we both became aware of the connection he pulled his hand away as though unexpectedly uncomfortable and asked me again, “Do you mind if I join you for just a little while?”
The seconds seemed to hang almost pregnant in the air, charged with expectation. I was barely able to nod my assent motioning to the seat across from me, after feeling forced, against my will, to relinquish his hand.

What was that, I wondered? I gently probed his mind and found he was wondering the exact same thing. Sitting across from him I was momentarily distracted by his perfectly manicured nails. Was he a dandy?



©by Raina Schell
Twitter @RainaSchell
Please like me on Facebook!! Raina on Facebook



Sunday, August 17, 2014

MEET MY CHARACTER Blog Hop!


I was invited to participate in a blog hop titled: “Meet My Character Blog Tour” by the lovely and talented Regina Kammer – thank you Regina!! This blog hop highlights a main character from an author’s work-in-progress (WIP) or recently published or soon-to-be-published work. Regina Kammer introduced Joseph Phillips from her Historical Erotica, Disobedience by Design, which I am currently reading and thoroughly enjoying! In this book, which takes place mainly in England in 1860, Joseph is a very experienced and quite gorgeous 21 year old American from NYC. Read more aboutJoseph and Disobedience by Design! More links can be found at the bottom of this entry.

The Character from my Destiny Series that I will briefly discuss here is… dun dun dun... LIZZY

1) What is the name of your character?  Is he/she fictional or a historic person?
Her full name is Elisabetta Moretti but everyone calls her Lizzy. She is fictional but please don’t tell her that. She may come after you.

2) When and where is the story set?
The story is set in modern day Sicily, Italy.

3) What should we know about him/her?
Lizzy grows up, the only daughter of a hard working fisherman, in a small Sicilian fishing village some 77 kilometers from the capital of Palermo. She has no mother but she does have a brother that she's never met.

Lizzy becomes a trained thief possessing the paranormal abilities of telepathy and mind control. She's endowed with at least 2 other abilities that are not fully realized until much later. In book 1 Lizzy is a young girl, growing up in Sicily. In book 2 Lizzy is 23 years old, while traversing the Atlantic, aboard a vast ocean liner. In book 2 Lizzy is introduced to her soul mate Vincent. Lizzy, is a stunning Sicilian female of course, who, though well versed in all areas of self defense and other criminal underground activities, is naïve in the ways of love and life.

4) What is the main conflict? What messes up his/her life?
In Book 1 - Lizzy’s main conflict is that she doesn’t fit in. She has no friends as a young child and feels like an outsider looking in. All she wants is to belong… so when she finally finds a place where she does feel a part of - she becomes internally torn because this place is teaching her the prowess needed to be part of the criminal underground. These new skills and new friends come with a price she’s not sure she can pay. In order to truly be a “part of” Lizzy must abandon her father and ultimately relinquish her own integrity.

5) What is the personal goal of the character?
She wants to be loved and accepted for who she is not for what she can or can’t do. She spends a lot of time proving herself and trying to build up a family from a wild cast of characters all imbued with paranormal abilities, who are misfits just like herself.

6) Is there a working title for this novel, and can we read more about it?
The working title is Exquisite Destiny and it is now a projected 5 book series currently being called The Destiny Series. It took on a life of its own and sprouted babies.

7) When can we expect the book to be published?
That’s a good question and I don’t have an answer to that yet. I am currently re-writing book 2. The bulk of Book 2 was written during NaNoWriMo 2013. Book 1 will be written during NaNo 2014. My website will be updated with current information but I’m hoping for Spring 2015 at the latest.


More about the Meet My Characters blog hop!

I was tagged by Regina Kammer who introduced the dashing young Joseph Phillips in her Meet my Character Blog Post.

Regina Kammer is a librarian, an art historian, and best-selling, multi-published writer of erotica and historical erotic romance. She has been published by Cleis Press, Go Deeper Press, Ellora’s Cave, House of Erotica, and her own imprint, Viridium Press. She began writing historical fiction with romantic elements during NaNoWriMo 2006, switching to erotica when all her characters suddenly demanded to have sex.
You can follow Regina on:


I’ve tagged Kayla Hampton and Maya Goode who will be posting their blog spots on August 25th

Kayla Hampton has always been fascinated by the dark and sexy creatures that live in our dreams (or nightmares).  Bringing these characters to life in her books is what she wants to do when she “grows up”.  When Kayla is not writing passionate stories of love and war, she loves spending time with her husband and daughter on the Canadian West Coast. 
Follow Kayla:


Maya Goode is a short story author, novelist, and poet. Raised by an amazing mercurial woman who shared neither blood nor race, she lives on the edge of identities and writes deeply honest stories about the human journey. She is an alumna of Dominican University of California and resides somewhere between mountains and the ocean. Her first novel, Remigium Rising, will be published in Spring 2015. You can visit her at www.mayagoode.com