Notice: Function _load_textdomain_just_in_time was called incorrectly. Translation loading for the twentytwentyone domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home2/seejanew/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6131

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home2/seejanew/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php:6131) in /home2/seejanew/public_html/wp-includes/feed-rss2.php on line 8
Writing – See Jane Write Magazine https://seejanewritemagazine.com Because every woman has a story worth sharing... Sun, 12 Jan 2014 22:52:57 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Writing tips from best-selling author Omar Tyree https://seejanewritemagazine.com/2014/01/13/writing-tips-from-best-selling-author-omar-tyree/ https://seejanewritemagazine.com/2014/01/13/writing-tips-from-best-selling-author-omar-tyree/#comments Mon, 13 Jan 2014 06:00:28 +0000 http://seejanewritemagazine.com/?p=1637 Continue reading Writing tips from best-selling author Omar Tyree]]>

By Chanda Temple

From left, Smithfield Library Branch Manager Yolanda Hardy, Birmingham Public Library Public Relations Director Chanda Temple, New York Times Best Selling author Omar Tyree and Birmingham Public Library board member Gwendolyn Welch.
From left, Smithfield Library Branch Manager Yolanda Hardy, Birmingham Public Library Public Relations Director and See Jane Write Magazine contributor Chanda Temple, New York Times Best Selling author Omar Tyree and Birmingham Public Library board member Gwendolyn Welch.

New York Times best-selling author Omar Tyree, who’s 44 and has been writing books for the last 21 years, recently visited Birmingham, Ala. to make public appearances and promote his latest book The Traveler, a fictional story about an American’s visit to Dubai. Several of his past fictional books have focused on relationships.

During his visit, the Philadelphia native stopped at the Smithfield Library to meet fans and give a lecture on his writing journey. Afterward, I asked him to provide a few writing tips for the new year. When the conversation was over, his frank answers left me ready to dive, head first, into writing the first chapter of a novel. I hope his tips will motivate you in 2014.

Writers write. You’ve been wanting to write a book but you haven’t because you are trying to “figure it out.’‘ Stop procrastinating and start writing. Just write down what you are thinking. You can revise it later.

Finish what you start.  Once you start writing, don’t let getting stuck on Chapter 3 stop you. Remember that writer’s block is only fear of what you are trying to write. Just put it out there. You have to have confidence and faith in your own words.

Think about subjects that will be meaningful for your readers. There are too many topics that you know people will already read or like. However, consider writing about something that’s out the box, a subject that will make people say, “Oh! Wow!’’ Challenge yourself and challenged your readers.

Keep going. Don’t stop at writing one, two or three books. If you want to be a writer, keep it going. “I’m up to book Number 27, 28, 29, 30. And I’ve still got a whole lot left in me and a whole lot of different ideas I can write about,’’ Tyree says.

Tyree’s tips and the library lecture were so good, I couldn’t let the conversation just end there. So I asked him a few more questions to help writers.

Chanda Temple interviewing author Omar Tyree
Chanda Temple interviewing author Omar Tyree

You talked about growing up in Philadelphia and overhearing teenage girls give detailed information about their love lives as you all rode buses to school. Such colorful details can give a writer something to draw from during the writing process. But what do you do if you have plain thoughts, lead a plain life and you don’t think your stories will move readers? 

“You write plain thoughts,’’ Tyree says. “To say that plain thoughts can’t move, is wrong. You have other people who are in plain places as well and they’ll connect to those same things. They will be able to relate to that. You still have to write it down and you have to put it out there anyway because you have to see if people will be able to enjoy it. And you’ll surprise yourself.’’

“And that (surprise) will give you confidence to write the next one,’’ he says. “I hear what you are saying, but write it first and let’s see where it goes first. You can’t make that assumption before you do it.’’

What should an author do when his or her book is not moving and selling? Are they a failure? Should they just move on and keep writing?

“When I was first coming through, they said the third book was the charm. You’ve got to keep writing. The first book — (readers) may not like that one. It may be too hard,’’ he says.

“John Grisham’s A Time to Kill dealt with a very racially-charged issue. A lot of people didn’t read that book. The Firm was his third book — that took off. Then he came back to what was his favorite, A Time to Kill. So yeah, keep doing what you are doing. Sometimes, the audience will come around. Sometimes, you will come around to figure out how to do it better.”

(Side note: When Tyree released his third book, Flyy Girl, in 1993, readers snapped up the coming-of-age story about a young woman in the late 1980s. Hollywood is now looking at turning the book into a movie. He received the 2001 NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Literature in Fiction and a 2006 Phillis Wheatley Literary Award for Body of Work in Fiction.)

How do you decide if you should write fiction or nonfiction? 

“It’s easier to write fiction than nonfiction. With nonfiction, there’s more research involved and checking the facts,’’ he says. He adds that although you still have to check facts for fictional stories, fiction offers more freedom. You can create what you want to create and go on your own story with fiction.

For more information about Tyree, who lives in Charlotte, N.C., visit www.omartyree.com. He says he offers consultations and does speaking engagements on a variety of topics. Follow him on Twitter at @omartyree.

 

 

Chanda Temple is director of public relations for the Birmingham Public Library. Before joining the library in 2012, she worked as a reporter for 19 years. Her last reporting job was as a features reporter at The Birmingham News in Birmingham, Ala., where she covered everything from cops and courts to fashion and elections. She’s received several  awards for her stories and enjoys coaching students and adults on their writing, social media and networking skills. Follow her on Twitter @chandatemple.

]]>
https://seejanewritemagazine.com/2014/01/13/writing-tips-from-best-selling-author-omar-tyree/feed/ 2 1637
How To Prepare For a Vacation From Your Blog https://seejanewritemagazine.com/2013/12/09/how-to-prepare-for-a-vacation-from-your-blog/ https://seejanewritemagazine.com/2013/12/09/how-to-prepare-for-a-vacation-from-your-blog/#comments Mon, 09 Dec 2013 06:00:43 +0000 http://seejanewritemagazine.com/?p=1477 Continue reading How To Prepare For a Vacation From Your Blog]]> By Javacia Harris Bowser, See Jane Write Magazine Founding Editor

All my bags are packed im ready to go.
image by self spirit soul via flickr/creative commons

With the winter holidays upon us, chances are you going to need to take some time off from blogging. Maybe you’re traveling to visit family and friends for Christmas. Maybe your in-laws are coming to visit and you know you won’t have time to write while they’re in town. Or maybe you’re facing end-of-the-year burnout and you just need a break.

Just because you go on vacation doesn’t mean your blog has to as well. Updating your blog regularly is important for building and maintaining a loyal readership.

Here are three tips to keeping your blog fresh while you’re away.

Blog like crazy before your break. Grab your laptop and your notebook of post ideas and head to your favorite coffee shop. Spend the day writing and scheduling blog posts for your time off. Keep the posts short and sweet, but meaningful. Be careful not to sacrifice quality for quantity.

While you’re preparing for house guests, invite guest writers to your blog. Recruit a few friends to do guest posts for your site. Offer to do the same for them for their next vacation. Be sure your guest bloggers are writing about topics related to your niche and in a voice that is distinct but not so divergent from yours that they’ll scare off your readers.

Take your blog (and your readers) on vacation with you. If you love to take pictures when you travel, simply turn those snapshots into blog posts. Don’t feel you have to spend hours of your vacation writing wordy posts. Just upload pics from your photo and create mini-photo essays for your blog.

 

When you return from your hiatus, regardless of the reason for your break, be sure to come back strong with a thoughtful, high quality post that your readers will love and that will remind you why you started blogging in the first place.

 

]]>
https://seejanewritemagazine.com/2013/12/09/how-to-prepare-for-a-vacation-from-your-blog/feed/ 1 1477