Becoming A Fiction Writer
One girl, one dream … and a whole lot of procrastination
November 29, 2009 by amanda

So, I forgot to tell you: My novel was an Amazon semi-finalist

amazon-breakthrough-kanakos-foreigner

Back in March, before my blogging took a back seat to life for a half a year, you may well remember that my first (as yet unpublished) novel Kanako’s Foreigner had made it into the quarter finals of the Amazon.com Breakthrough Novel Award.

What I forgot to tell you – and something I have to admit I’m pretty proud of – is that after that, it reached the semi-finals, too. That means that out of the thousands of novels submitted (they don’t say how many, but the limit was 10,000), mine was in the top 100. And people (or at least one person) actually read the whole thing. Amazing, hey! In fact, I have a review from Publishers Weekly that I can quote:

A lyrical portrait of an Australian woman’s self-discovery in Japan, this manuscript is brilliant in its sensory details, though flawed in its ability to evoke well-rounded characters. Set shortly after 9/11, the novel centers on Lisa, who moves to Japan and takes a job at an English-language school. Lisa is soon crushed out on a woman named Kanako, a student and dentist who rescues Lisa from a severe toothache. The two begin spending time together, though it seems Kanako is more interested in having a foreign friend as a status symbol than in a genuine friendship. Subplots include the story of Hiromi, a recent college graduate who takes a job at the language school in order to get a foreign boyfriend, and Yoko, a student preparing to marry her aloof boyfriend. The book provides excellent imagery, and the descriptions of the Japanese food are enough to make a reader’s mouth water. Though the author fails to make clear what Lisa finds so compelling about the vaguely drawn Kanako, readers with a fondness for ex-pat or fish-out-of-water stories will find much to enjoy.

It’s really weird to read somebody else’s summary of my novel, but it all sounds quite fair – and the criticisms are especially useful. And it was quite an ego buzz to get selected for the Top 100, I have to admit. Not long after that, I started to work through the novel and rewrite some parts, a project that has now been abandoned for a few months, but one that I’m about to get back into.

If you’re curious, you can still download the first chapter or two of Kanako’s Foreigner from Amazon – and it’s free – just surf over to ABNA – Kanako’s Foreigner and you can download the extract from Amazon Shorts. On the other hand, perhaps you should wait until you can buy the whole novel – it might be substantially different to what you read there.

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March 22, 2009 by amanda

ABNA reviews and learning from a novel contest

amazon-breakthrough-kanakos-foreigner

As you know, I was pretty excited earlier this week when I was notified that my first novel has made the quarter finals of the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award contest. What I hadn’t expected was that the parts of the day I save for fiction writing business were about to get completely taken over by ABNA, but they have, and it’s been a real learning curve of a week. And a very interesting one!

Amazon’s glitches are my gain

If you’ve gone to the Kanako’s Foreigner page – my novel’s spot on Amazon – and tried to download the excerpt they have there (first couple of chapters), you’ll have been disappointed unless you live in the United States – all “foreign” internet users are unable to download the excerpts, myself included. Since the 500 quarter finalists are keen to read and review other excerpts and get other people to do the same (as customer reviews may have a small influence on next round selection, though it’s nowhere near the major criterion) , I thought at first this was a highly disadvantageous situation.

Now I’ve changed my mind and am thanking Amazon for its thoughtlessness! Via the ABNA forums online, writers from both inside and outside the US have been sharing their excerpts via email for all of those people who can’t download them, and that means I’ve been in touch with a bunch of writers who I otherwise would never have “met”. How inspiring for me to “virtually meet” a whole lot of people who are in a very similar position to me – with at least a first novel written, and trying to get published while still polishing their writing skills. It really is helpful to make these contacts and there are already a couple of writers who I’m sure I’ll remain in contact with in the future. On that note, let me point out my favourite ABNA quarter finalist so far – Kristan Hoffman’s The Good Daughters, which is not only quite obviously the kind of book I’d read (there are family relationships, cross-cultural influences, all my faves) but also very well written.

Learning from reviews of my novel

Throughout the life of my first novel, I haven’t had that much feedback on it – mainly because I’m too shy to ask for it. One good friend (who’s also a clever reader) gave me some excellent, detailed feedback on an earlier draft (Claire, you might not recognise its current incarnation – lots has changed!) and I’ve had a few useful comments from a couple of contests I’ve entered.

But now I’m getting so-called customer reviews from other writers (and some random readers as well), and that’s giving me plenty of food for thought. Having heard a rumour that these customer reviews might be deleted in future rounds of the contest, I thought I’d record the highlights here – both positive and negative – so I can both congratulate myself and figure out what I could still improve when I revisit this novel sometime.

On the positive side, it seems that my writing is considered technically good:

Clean, fresh–trimmed of all fat. The writer has command of her craft; her sentences are crisp, well written, details emerge smoothly.

As another reviewer has already noted, this is well-written, the pace is leisurely and the plot meanders in ways that provide a window into the Japanese culture.

For me this work reads visually, like a movie, which I always like. The characters are interesting, sketched with relevant details but not overdone. All in all, the signs of a skilled writer.

On the downside, I think the story might be starting to slowly, or there might not be enough plot to drive readers further into the novel (remember they’re only reading the first 5,000 words):

There is no big hook here–but we quickly become engrossed with the protagonist and her search for cornflakes, milk, and then her toothache becomes the major dramatic event.

It is well written, but I found that I was wondering where the story was leading to. Was it a romance, was she running away from something that was going to catch up to her?

This is a refreshing work, well-written and interesting, though it doesn’t hurry into conflict, tension, or action.

And one more point I want to remember is that many of the positive comments came from people who had some link to Japan (the setting of the novel) already. I’d like to know if readers who have no particular knowledge of Japan or a special interest in the country would also be drawn in by the story.

If you’re curious and want to read the beginning to my novel, but you’re outside the US and can’t download it, drop me an email via the contact form and I can get you a PDF. It’s scary, but it seems I finally have to start letting more people read my work. You’d think that’d be the whole point of writing stuff, but it’s really something I struggle to deal with!

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March 17, 2009 by amanda

I’m a quarter finalist in the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award

Banzai on Fuji-san

About six weeks ago I proudly finished the edit and rewrite of my first novel draft and submitted it to the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award. They have quite a convoluted procedure for getting from (up to) 10,000 entries down to the final winner, but the exciting news is that I’ve passed through the first two stages.

I heard today that my novel Kanako’s Foreigner is officially a quarter finalist for the 2009 Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award – that means that from the initial 10,000 entries (well, nobody knows if they got that many – but that is the maximum number) I was successful in reaching the best 2,000 cut, simply on the strength of my short pitch; and now I’ve made it into the top 500 on the basis of the first 5,000 words of my novel.

In the next round, Publishers Weekly people will read the entire manuscripts (quickly, I presume, since there are 500 of them) and on April 15 they’ll announce 100 semi-finalists. Keep your fingers crossed for me!

In the meantime, it looks like (some of) you can read the excerpt of my novel that made it this far as a free, downloadable “Amazon Short”. I say “some of you” because I can’t, and it sounds like other people outside the United States have the same problem – if I try to download my excerpt I get a message saying I’m in the wrong country to do this. American readers, do have a go – go to Kanako’s Foreigner at Amazon and click on “Download for free” on the right – and do please let me know if it works! Presumably they’ll fix it for non-US people soon and I’ll let you know when that happens.

Anyway, I’m pretty excited to have made it this far. I even feel a bit like the man on the right in this picture. That picture’s there for two reasons – one, it’s an accurate image of how I feel, and two, because a scene very similar to this is actually in the novel. As the man was saying at the moment I took that photo – it’s on top of Mount Fuji – “Banzai!” (Hooray!)

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February 4, 2009 by amanda

15-day challenge and Amazon contest: success!

No doubt some of you have been wondering how I went with my 15-day creation challenge and my goal of getting my novel ready for the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award. The good news is: I did it!

Procrastination overcome by short-term goals

I really have to shout out a huge thank you to Zoe at Essential Prose for coming up with this 15-day challenge. The goal was to choose a project and work on it for an hour a day for 15 days. I’m actually pretty amazed at how well this worked.

Perhaps knowing that this intensive work would only last for 15 days helped me to keep doing it night after night – because I nearly always worked on my novel last thing at night, after all my paid work had got done – and having picked a project that I thought I could finish within the 15 days really helped. I think there were only one or two days that I didn’t do a full hour of work on my novel editing, but in each case I had done closer to two hours the day before so I didn’t feel too bad.

When the Amazon contest opened on Monday (Sunday night in the States, but that was 2pm on Monday here – right when I was in the middle of class and had to nervously wait a couple of hours and hope the first 10,000 entrants hadn’t already got their novels in) I was ready to go. And I was pretty pleased with myself, I have to say. Again, this is not a contest I expect to get anywhere in, but the motivation to complete my big edit in time to enter was perfect. (And given that entry was free, it’s been a great motivator all round).

What’s my next 15-day challenge?

Since this 15-day creation challenge worked out so well, I’m already thinking of what my next one will be. Since the rewrite I’ve just done goes a long way towards satisfying my second goal for 2009 I think I’ll concentrate on making progress towards the third goal instead, which is to get my second novel ready to submit in May. So my next 15-day challenge will be related to finishing the draft of that novel. I’ll have to take a closer look at how much I’ve done – and I seem to recall I have quite a lot of outlining done – and see if finishing the draft in 15 days is realistic, or a sub-goal of that instead. Stay tuned – and try the 15 day thing yourself if you feel like it will help! Let me know if it does. Or share your own anti-procrastination tricks, too.

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January 25, 2009 by amanda

Will another 24-hour short story get written?

It’s that time again: the Writers Weekly 24-hour short story contest is happening today. Right now, as I type, in fact. Each time I seem to get just a little bit better at turning out a half-decent short story within a day; last time I wrote a story that I still actually like, a few months later.

I’m stuck! My story has no ending!

This time round the contest theme connected to a wedding in a small chapel. After a few paragraphs of brainstorming and free-writing, I found some interesting characters and got them on their way to the chapel. I’m really happy with the first 650 words of my story, considering it all came slithering out on a Sunday morning. Right now, somebody in the story needs to object to the marriage. The word limit for the contest this time is 950, so I’ve got plenty of room to get a great ending in. Because, as everybody knows, there’s no good story without a good ending.

But I’ve got stuck. I’ve tried walking away from the story for a couple of hours. Daydreaming about it while in the shower, which usually provides me with tonnes of ideas. Asking my husband. Googling the topic. (Who would’ve thought that “objecting at a wedding” would have been such a talked about topic on the web?) And so on.

So my only solution now, apart from giving up (I promise I won’t) is to open the file again and just keep typing and typing until something decent comes out. I’ve got my subconscious on the job, even my husband keeps popping into my room with new ideas, and somewhere, somehow, the right ending is waiting for me. I’ll let you know if I find it.

Update: The story has an ending!

Phew! This strategy worked. Random brainstorming and just writing more and more finally led me to an answer and an ending. I tried to follow last contest’s strategy of having some twists followed by more twists, and I hope I succeeded. I think the story ended up okay, although it’s not a topic I would usually write about. I’ve sent it off and that means it’s time to get back to working on my novel after this brief short fiction interlude. The bonus is that this means I’ve now submitted two short stories to markets or contests this year so according to my goals I just have 18 more to go.

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January 19, 2009 by amanda

Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award also has a February 2 deadline

I guess I should start getting less surprised that everything in my life seems to happen for a good reason, and often with great timing. It was just yesterday that I made a commitment to have a beautifully-edited version of my Japanese novel ready by February 2, as per the 15 day creation challenge set by Zoe Westhof.

This morning I sat down at my computer with the fresh eyes and stimulated brain of a Monday morning. (Oh, that might sound odd. My Monday morning, the first day of my working-from-home days, is probably different to yours, if you’re hitting the office for the first time for the week, bleary-eyed and unenthusiastic.) Anyway, I checked on my to-do list with the aim of getting this blog a bit more action, and saw that I had an overdue task to blog about the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award.

Perfect timing: My novel will be ready for Amazon Breakthrough

I’ve had my eye on this contest for ages, but let it drift off the radar recently. It seems that there is no entry fee, and the way it works is they accept only the first 10,000 entries starting from February 2. I have no idea how long it will take them to get 10,000 entries, but I remember reading a tip from Hope Clark at Funds for Writers which said we should have our manuscripts ready to go from the first day to be sure we didn’t miss out.

If you’ve been paying attention, you might have seen the lovely synergy here. According to the 15-day challenge, my novel will be ready on exactly the same day as the contest opens. That’s surely a sign, isn’t it? Now, since this is only the second year that the Amazon Breakthrough award has run, it’s hard to know too much about what they’re looking for – last year’s winner was a fairly thrilling-sounding mystery, but others that did well included quieter storylines that might match mine.

A good pitch gets you into Round 2

The key thing seems to be that the pitch must be fantastic. The first round of culling, from 10,000 down to “up to” 2,000, is based solely on the 300-word pitch that you send in. Three hundred words? To describe my 60,000-word novel? Eeeeek!

Amazon’s explanation of a pitch in their FAQ doesn’t make it sound any less daunting:

The pitch is more than just a summary, it needs to be a well written explanation of what the book is about.  Talk about your novel’s strengths with respect to how it is being evaluated; Think about the elements chosen on which to judge your novel for the purpose of this contest; its overall strength, plot development, character development, originality of idea, and writing style or prose.  Take the time to study your intended market and make sure your pitch demonstrates that you understand how your book fits within this market and how it will identify with your audience …  The Pitch should be a concise explanation of your book and why the reader would want to read your novel.

I’ll have to dig around the site a bit more, as there are two videos to watch about preparing your novel and about writing the pitch, plus a discussion forum to go with it. As you all know, I love working under pressure – or more accurately, I actually get work done under pressure, rather than when life is easy – so I’m hoping this contest and the 15-day challenge actually net me a beautiful, complete novel.

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October 15, 2008 by amanda

Where do my ideas come from? A mind mapping experiment and contest

Over at a blog I often read called The Writer’s Technology Companion they’re running a contest on mind-mapping -a technique my visual-learning brain rather likes – and the theme was “where do you get ideas”. That’s where this colourful mind map sprung from. In fact my ideas come from so many different sources that I ran out of room to represent them all, but you get the idea. It’s no grand amazing news or anything, but it was fun for me to flick through my lil’ green notebook of ideas and remember how each one came to be.

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October 14, 2008 by amanda

Surprising myself with a short story for the Christmas season

With my teaching load finally reduced (I’ve been doing extra work at that job for the past three months or so – there’s a massive shortage of ESL teachers in Perth!), this week I have actually had two days at home to get my writing work done. Of course, I actually need about three or four, but two days is certainly better than one. And it was great timing because I’ve been trying to write a Christmas-themed short story for a contest which closes tomorrow.

The idea for the story has been sitting in my head for ages – well years, actually, since I visited “the real Santa” in Finnish Lapland a few Christmases back. But I had almost given up hope of having time to get the story out and looking good in time for this contest deadline, until I woke up early this morning and realised that I had enough time to give it a go and still make the rest of my regular writing deadlines today.

The story is half fun and half serious, but I had a lot of fun writing it. And the best surprise of all was the ending, because it changed. About half way through I suddenly remembered the advice I’d used in the last 24-hour short story contest: to lead the plot towards a twist, and then suddenly twist again in the other direction! And I managed to do that with this story (successfully, I hope) and I really rather like it. And it’s quite rare that I say that about a short story I’ve written – I often despise them later.

Anyway, the result of the morning’s work is that after having no more than an outline, I now have a 2,500 word short story sitting on the dinner table to edit later. (And take at least 250 words out, using Stephen King’s 10% rule!). Of course, I may already despise it by the time I read it again later on, but I hope not, and in any case it’ll definitely be heading in to the contest tomorrow.

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September 30, 2008 by amanda

Vogel winner Andrew Croome and encouragement for me (and you)

You might remember that one of the goals I successfully met this year was to submit a novel to the Australian/Vogel Literary Award contest. I did it – albeit a novel that I think needs a lot of revision, but at least a full verison exists thanks to the deadline of the contest – and the act of sending in that manuscript really meant a lot to me. And I hope to enter the Vogel with a new novel every year until I can’t (which, with an upper age limit of 35, is a sad short few years away).

Anyway, last week the winner of this year’s Vogel was announced. From the 200+ manuscripts they received (and read, between just four judges – what a lot of reading), the winner was Andrew Croome, who wrote a novel titled Document Z based on the events of the Petrov affair here in Australia in the 1950s. If you’re interested, you can read an extract from the novel here.

A couple of things about Andrew Croome’s background and experience have left me feeling a little reassured. First of all, this novel was the first he actually completed – he’d had a few false starts but this was the first manuscript he got all the way to the end of. That’s encouraging, somehow. He also admitted to doing something that I’ve done (but never admitted to):

I did all the nerdy things like go into the book store and look to where my book will be on the shelf so it certainly is hugely exciting.

Yes, I’ll admit that when I’m in my favourite bookshops I do look at the section on the shelf to see where my future books will sit. I’d rather think of it as “positive thinking” than “nerdy”, but in any case I’ve decided that a surname starting with “K” (as mine does!) is a good middle-of-the-shelf kind of place for a book.

The big difference between me and Andrew Croome is that he’s studying (or has studied, the article I read didn’t make it clear if he’d finished) creative writing – up to PhD level. I’m still undecided as to whether studying creative writing is the way to go and while I (hopefully) finish my MEd next year I can postpone the decision for another couple of semesters at least. There are definitely plenty of published writers out there who’ve never studied creative writing (and a fair few who haven’t even set foot inside a university, I guess) so it’s clearly no must.

In any case, congratulations to Andrew Croome and I look forward to finding him between other “C”-surnamed authors on the bookshop shelves sometime next year.

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August 31, 2008 by amanda

How to be miserable: Try to become a fiction writer!

Don’t worry, I haven’t entirely sunk into a can’t-finish-a-novel depression – I just liked the idea of entering the How to be Miserable contest being sponsored by life coach Tim Brownson. But in fact, trying to becoming a fiction writer can certainly produce its moments of misery, so if you’re in the business of wanting to be miserable, here’s how:

  1. Set yourself a goal of becoming a published fiction writer. Being just a writer is hard enough, but wanting to be published? It’s a guaranteed path to misery. I don’t know the stats – and I don’t think I want to – but I’m guessing the proportion of fiction words written that are actually subsequently published is very, very tiny.
  2. Try to write fiction while you’re doing a demanding day job like teaching. Better yet, try to write fiction while you’re teaching all day and writing internet posts for travel sites in the evening so that you can pay the mortgage (hey, that sounds kind of familiar). Trying to find the inspiration to write a word or two of enjoyable fiction after expending all that energy is a great way to become miserable.
  3. Be shy enough about your fiction writing skills that you don’t join any online forums to share your fiction, or attend any local writing groups. Getting feedback might be too helpful and dig you out of your misery far too quickly. Surely a real writer has to do it all on their lonesome.
  4. Think to yourself that it’s impossible that your novels will ever be published. Don’t head to your local bookstore and find the alphabetical spot on the shelf where your novel would sit. This kind of positive thinking could lead you dangerously far away from being miserable.
  5. Make sure you keep your desk absolutely covered in bills, books, pencils, old newspapers and unlabeled CDs so that you can’t possibly think beyond the clutter. Even better, start piling the next wave of paperwork on your chair so that when you try to sit down to work, you miserably throw said pile on the floor and then tread on a staple that’s come half undone, providing pain to add to your misery.
  6. Spend all of your free time reading published novels by great writers and reflect on how you’ll never be able to write that well (as well as having no free time to actually write). Comparing your own writing to that of Jane Austen or Gabriel Garcia Marquez should make you miserable nice and fast.

There you go. I’m quite surprised at how easy it is to become miserable. And a little pleased that I’ve actually done only about half of these things myself. So far.

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