Film

April 26, 2008

Important Note

Effective today, I will be posting my blogs on my website as follows:

Writing: Craft, Art, Business and Life: My Kitchen Table

Spirituality: Faith Zone


The "Vicki Hinze on Writing" blog will be incorporated into the MY KITCHEN TABLE blog.

The website url, should you have link challenges or desire to paste into your browser is:

http://www.vickihinze.com

Blessings,

Vicki

P.S. If you're viewing this via reader, you'll need to visit the www.vickihinze.com website to view any updates.

I apologize for any inconvenience, but I'm paddling as hard as I can, and I just can't keep up, so I'm having to consolidate where and when possible. Appreciate your understanding.

For your convenience, I will still notify you of new posts here.

Vicki Hinze
www.vickihinze.com


TAGS: Vicki Hinze, hinze blog, CREATIVE WRITING, feature article, writing craft, books, novels, readers, authors, emerald coast writers, novelists, booksellers, book reviewers, everyday woman radio, romance writers, thriller writers, suspense writers

November 15, 2007

REMINDER: DEADLINE THRILLER Awards


REMINDER

Re: International Thriller Writer Awards
Enter: NOW!

We're getting down to the deadline wire on entering books in this year's ITW Thriller Awards. To be eligible, books must be in the judges' hands on or before 12/1/2007, so it's time to move.

The contest has three categories:

BEST NOVEL (hard cover)
BEST FIRST NOVEL (hard cover)
BEST PAPERBACK ORIGINAL (paper)

ELIGIBLE are books first published in English in calendar year 2007 by an ITW recognized publisher. (If your company is not on the list, email vkhinze@aol.com and we'll walk you through the process.)

WHO CAN NOMINATE A BOOK?

Anyone. (The majority are entered by Editors, Agents or Publicists. Author entries are welcome, too.)

HOW MANY BOOKS CAN BE NOMINATED?

There is no limit.

HOW MUCH DOES IT COST?

There is no entry fee.

WHAT MUST I DO?

Email Vicki Hinze (vkhinze@aol.com) and request an entry form for a specific category (or, if entering multiple books, any/all categories). Vicki will send you the entry form, you complete it and send the books to the judges.

WHEN IS THE DEADLINE?

Novels must be in the judges' hands on or before December 1, 2007.

Direct any questions to Vicki Hinze at vkhinze@aol.com.

Good Luck!!!

Blessings,

Vicki

October 12, 2007

Thank You, Lizzie Palmer


This video was created by Lizzie Palmer, a fifteen-year-old girl who has, through this video, reminded millions.

Blessings,

Vicki

April 03, 2007

BENEFITS OF SMALL CONFERENCES


VickiVickihinze0001_2_2

Two weekends ago, I attended the Emerald Coast Writers, Inc. conference in Destin, Florida. Not only was it held at a terrific resort on the sugar-white beach (5 pools, a spa, exercise room and oodles of goodies) but it was a small conference of just under a hundred people. I had a terrific time. And that got me to thinking of the many benefits of small conferences that I thought I would share.

1. Networking. A NYT bestselling author did the keynote. But he (Jeramiah Healy) also did several workshops on craft and the business. He hung out with all conference attendees, so even brand new writers had access to him and his considerable bank of knowledge.

2. Networking. Two excellent agents attended. Elaine Spencer from Deidre Knight Agency and Natanya Wheeler from Lowenstein-Yost Agency. As well as a panel and appointments, they hung out with all conference attendees so even brand new writers had access to them and their considerable banks of knowledge. If you’re shopping, check these agents out on the web. Both are very personable, earthy and friendly, and sharp.

3. Networking. Two excellent editors attended: Kerry Estevez (Medallion Press Editor) and Nina Kooij (Pelican Press Editor-in-Chief) and both did a panel and hung out with all conference attendees so even brand new authors had access to them and their considerable banks of knowledge. Medallion and Pelican are both Independent Presses. Medallion is building quite a reputation. It is home to a horror author who is not S. King or P. Straub who is on the list--not with her NY publisher, but with Medallion. This company also took on Dolores Wilson (Big Hair and Flying Cows) who as a brand new author won Publisher’s Weekly Pinnacle Award. (Hilarious book, btw.) Pelican has 500 titles on its backlist and is the largest Independent Press operating. So strong companies, strong editors, and very author-friendly.

4. Networking. A host of multi-published authors and educators did workshops. When I wasn’t one of them, I sat in other workshops. The quality and variety was significant, and because the classes were small, more writers got to ask more questions that pertained to their specific situations and circumstances.

5. Networking. Among the workshops were two--not one, but two--by noted Life Coach Darlene Dean. Both were inspiring and illuminating. Darlene is also a writer and it shows in ways I can’t begin to describe. Every author wrote not one but two stories during a one-hour class--and read them aloud--and they were GOOD.

As you can see, a lot of networking opportunities existed. Far more than a writer typically encounters at large conferences.

6. Education. The educational opportunities were amazing. Coordinator, Joyce Holland, made sure there was something for everyone--from poetry to crime fiction to young adult and nonfiction to the mechanics of writing--and just to be sure no one left with unanswered questions, there were two “Ask Me Anything” sessions. One with Jerry and me, and another.

7. Fun. There were evening gab sessions where everyone gathered and just talked writing and the business in a large group. Friendly, relaxed, informative and just plain fun.

8. Some spent some time on the beach. Gorgeous and the weather was amazing.

So while the three days were busy and schedules were full, because of the atmosphere and attitudes creating such a positive atmosphere, people went home relaxed and not worn out. That alone is worth giving a small conference a serious look!

I’ll be going to this one again. The hotel was extremely reasonable, the conference fee minimal (how they manage to offer so much for this price is beyond me) and the rejuvenation on its own makes it a bargain. I was very pleasantly surprised--and I met two people who will be friends for a long time.

Now I’ve been to many conferences. And I’m saying that it’s next to impossible to gain this level of interaction and information and attention to your specific needs at large ones. I can’t speak for all small conferences, but I can and will speak for this one. Emerald Coast Writers, Inc., and Joyce Holland, the conference coordinator, gave attendees real value. The kind that comes in many ways, including those which can’t be measured.

Beam me up for 2008!

Blessings,

Vicki

©2007, Vicki Hinze

January 01, 2007

WINDSHIELDS & REARVIEW MIRRORS

Argh

As many of you know, I’m taking care of my daughter’s newborn while she teaches, so my schedule has had to undergo radical changes. Well, I got this brilliant idea to finish a first draft on a new suspense novel over the holidays--what was I thinking???--and so I’ve been pulling some marathon days.

I started at 2:30 A.M. and worked through until my darling hubby called me for dinner. I felt great. Not only had I edited pages 100-200, I had also produced 32 new pages. What a fantastic writing day. On a roll from beginning to end.

The second time he called me, I rushed, and promptly saved the old document over the new one--the one with 17 HOURS worth of changes THROUGHOUT the manuscript and those 32 new pages.

I knew the moment I’d goofed--just as I knew done was done and there was no going back. I was not happy.

And that’s why you’re getting this post rather than the one I’d planned for today, because this too is a mistake we make that we don’t want to make. I’ve now changed procedures so that I have two backups and save intermittently on 2 different jump drives as well as the hard drive so this doesn’t happen again.

But that doesn’t change the fact that I screwed up and lost all that work.

I was . . . emotional.

But within two hours, I accepted the fact that I’d just have to redo it all, and the credit for that largely goes to Joel Osteen. In a lecture he gave just a few days ago, he was talking about the mistakes we make and how some of us get stuck and can’t let go of them and that keeps us from moving forward.

I know, it sounds like what we’ve been discussing in the MISTAKES WE MAKE SERIES. And while I knew that, I admit I was tired and cranky and I just needed to wallow a little.

Then I remembered a cute saying (you all know how I love sayings) that he shared..

There’s a reason cars have big windshields and little rearview mirrors.

I just loved that. Totally loved it.

We can’t change what’s behind us, so once we look at it, accept it, we’re done with it. We have to look at the bigger vista and that’s before us.

And so I changed my attitude and my view--from rearview to windshield.

I’m not yet back where I was on the book--end of year duties just insist on being done. But you know, I’ve gotten enough distance from the setback now that I know when I get past the editing and back to the writing again, the book will be stronger because now I clearly envision the places and conversations and events I created then. Now, I’m starting out with attitudes in place and a sharp focus rather than that nebulous getting acquainted fuzz.

Please note the photo above was on realizing what I had done. Made a mistake.

The good news? I survived and am pressing forward again--but without the jump drive inserted and with the new procedures in place!!!

I hope you’re off to a fantastic start this New Year’s Day and that sharing this faux pas helps.

May you never have one like it. :)

Blessings,

Vicki

Vicki Hinze

December 31, 2006

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

Happy_new_year

May you dream huge, reach your dreams and find your life filled with all good things!

Blessings,

Vicki

December 19, 2006

MISTAKES WE MAKE: PART 4

MOTIVATION AND FRIGIDITY

As people and as writers, we tend to underestimate the impact of motivation and frigidity. Ignoring either can carry huge penalties because when you get to the bottom line, regardless of what we’re doing, our motivation for doing it governs whether or not we’ll be successful at it.

My one rule in writing is to never write a book I don’t love. In the beginning, I had many more rules, but situations arise and events occur that have managed to kick every other rule I set off the list.

That might sound confusing to some, but the truth is, it’s a simple matter of what motivates and when it motivates. Let me share an example.

I was cruising along writing paranormal novels. Then I went to the grocery store and overheard a young airman and his wife debating between buying a can of tuna and a jar of peanut butter. They couldn’t afford both. That startled, stunned and sickened me. It MOTIVATED me to abandon paranormal novels and write military novels: stories about those who serve and defend.

The emotion triggered was first shock and then rage. That inspired a deep dedication to the work. I wanted everyday people not involved in the military to know what it costs those who protect us.

When my mother was ill, I wanted to write a book for her that had all of her favorite things in it. She had been a lifelong voracious reader and very supportive of my writing efforts--even early on when no other person in the world cared whether or not I wrote.

The emotion triggered was love and the desire to give her a meaningful gift. That inspired a deep dedication to the work. It wasn’t easy. I had to write a contemporary novel that read like an historical, a time-travel that wasn’t a time-travel, dual plot lines, dual timelines, a Scotsman protagonist and a spunky heroine who loved him throughout the book not just at the end of it. It had to have an intriguing mystery and page-turning suspense. And it had to be credible. “Real people and real problems,” she said. That was an amazingly tall order, but I was MOTIVATED, and FESTIVAL was born.

In other novels, fear or rage motivates me to write a book. But that fear and/or rage takes many forms. Grief at losing my father (MAYBE THIS TIME), Abuse (ALL DUE RESPECT), political outrage (LADY LIBERTY), Terrorism: Biological warfare (SHADES OF GRAY), Psychological warfare (ACTS OF HONOR), chemical warfare (DUPLICITY). All of the aforementioned and more (the War Games series books, i.e., BODY DOUBLE through DOUBLE DARE and LADY JUSTICE, where shopping malls are biologically contaminated and our water or food supplies are poisoned.

My point is these motivators struck home. They didn’t just touch me. They scared the hell out of me and/or made me so angry I couldn’t not write them. Being interested isn’t enough. To spend your time (your life) writing something, you should be dedicated. Determined. You should be passionate.

If not, write about something else. Because, as I said above, regardless of what your motivation for writing a book is, that motivation determines the project’s success. Tap into those universal emotions and wallow in them. You’ll need that immersion at some time during the writing. That initial enthusiasm burst lasts about three chapters. After that, you need discipline and determination to keep writing, and that’s where your motivation carries you. Without it, or if it is weak, then you’re going to end up with a lot of projects started and few to none ever completed.

What is motivating you to write the story you’re writing? What motivations are strong or too weak to work for you?

Those are valid questions, and the answers to them are extremely important. Typically, however, the answers are also decidedly unique to the author. Maybe you’re in a crisis and want to help others navigate a similar crisis successfully. Maybe you’ve unlocked a secret that has help dramatically improve your relationships with others and you want to share it. Maybe you are a survivor of this or that tragedy, or a victim of this or that scam, or you’ve gone through a horrendous or funny or unbelievable event that you just have to share or you’ve imagined a situation in your mind and you want to manifest it in a novel to discover what happens!

What trips our switch is unique to us, but there is a rule of thumb to assist in determining the strength of the motivator. If it is tied to a universal emotion--an emotion that many human beings experience--then odds are high that the motivation is sufficient to sustain the trials of novel writing.

Bottom line advice: know what motivates you to write and never waste your time writing a novel you aren’t totally invested in writing. It’ll spare you rejections because your motivation is what permeates the book in a million ways to create “the magic.” It can’t be forced or faked. It shows every time.

These same principles apply in character motivations. If you need more information on that, I recommend you visit my free library: www.vickihinze.com and read the articles on Creating Unforgettable Characters, The Fictional Dream and Conflict.

So let’s say you’re strongly motivated to write a specific story. You dive in and things are going along great . . . until you reach a point where you’re going to have to reveal your soft underbelly. And you fear that revelation is going to cause challenges for you. Some common ones are:

You have to write a love scene and your minister, parents or kids are going to read it.

You have to use street language true to the characters, which includes that “f” word, and your kids, parents, in-laws, pastor or priest is going read it.

You have to relive horrific events you’ve endured and overcome and you know it’s going to bring them all back again and it’s going to hurt like hell.

You don’t want to reveal some aspect of yourself (your life or that of someone close to you) that will be revealed in the writing. Oh, the people close to you know this stuff, but do you want to be that exposed to the general public?

These are the bones of frigidity in your writing. We don’t want to embrace embarrassment, shame, that to which we are opposed or pain. We survived terrors once. We are not eager to relive it. And we like our privacy and believe there are things we shouldn’t and don’t want to share with anyone else, much less the public.

Those are but a few of the motivators that entice writers to be frigid. To hold back because to venture forward either takes us outside our personal comfort zone or crosses a line we are opposed to crossing.

Listen, there are private, personal things that you just plain don’t touch. Every single writer in the world sets those boundaries--and they should be set. Every thing in a life is not everyone’s business and to consider that it is, is amazingly arrogant.

You have to define your boundary. Set your line in the sand that you will not cross. Don’t apologize for it. Don’t resent it. It is your right as a writer and as a human being.

That said, you have to be true to your story. That’s your responsibility as a writer and as a human being. So find a way to meet the story’s needs and not violate your personal ethics. Both carry equal weight and an equal obligation to succeed and not fail either.

Admittedly, finding an equitable solution can be challenging. But you are creative, and if you seek, you will find one.

What you can’t do, should never do, is fail to fulfill your promise to your reader by avoiding something that should be addressed. Same holds true for the writer. So understand that if you write novels, you’re going to trudge through dark places and emotions you’d rather not face. Some things will sting, some will cut deep. Just remember, you hold the knife.

Often just knowing that negates a lot of would-be frigidity.

Which brings us to Procrastination. That’ll be our topic in MISTAKES WE MAKE: Part 5.

I hope this helps!

Blessings,

Vicki


© 2006, Vicki Hinze



Vicki Hinze
www.vickihinze.com
www.everydaywomanradio.com


=

November 26, 2006

John Gebhardt: WAR STAR


I received this photo via email this morning, along with the following note:

“[John’s] His wife, Mindy, related that this little girl's entire family was executed. They intended to execute her also and shot her in the head, but they failed to kill her. She was cared for by John's hospital and healing up, but has been crying and moaning. The nurses said John is the only one she seems to calm down with, so John has spent the last four nights holding her while they both sleep in that chair. The girl is coming along with her healing.

John comes home in early October.

*He is a real Star of the war and is representative of what America is trying to do.”

I haven’t seen this photo or story in the mainstream media, with the exception of on FOX NEWS. I wish that weren’t the case--that all Americans could see the spirit of John Gebhardt.

Bless him for his compassion and opening his heart to this child. May we all aspire to be like him.

Blessings,

Vicki
Astarini

November 17, 2006

IT GIRLS (GOTHAM ROSES) SERIES OPTIONED FOR TV

Time to celebrate!!!

The IT GIRLS series (www.itgirlsseries.com) has been optioned by Twin Star Entertainment (www.twinstartentertainment.com) for television and is currently in development. They’re going to call it GOTHAM ROSES. (If you recall, all the stories in the series revolve around socialites belonging to the Gotham Rose Club. My character is Princess Chloe St. John.)

There could be other projects done on this series as well.

Having one of my books optioned has been on my goal list for a very long time, and finally this dream has been realized.

Yippee!

Blessings,

Vicki

Vicki Hinze
Writing: www.vickihinze.com
Talk Shows: www.everydaywoman.com
Speciall Projects site:

October 03, 2006

MOST EFFECTIVE PROMOTION

Warning: this is a no-edit zone...

I was asked today to review all the promotions I've done and to name the one I felt had been most effective.

I did, and hands down the best thing was a DVD. On it were two interviews, targetinng different groups, and a book short (trailer).

As well as having the video streams on my website, I had 1,000 DVDs that were all masters, so they'd run on 99% of all computers. They were terrific for events, mailings--you name it.

Writers-in-Motion did the one on BODY Double, and they did a terrific job.

Here's a URL to the book short:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_4nUtjAXT4E

It wasn't the most or least expensive campaign I've done. But it was hands-down the most effective.

Blessings,

Vicki

Vicki Hinze
www.vickihinze.com

My Photo
AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Mobilise this Blog
Blog powered by TypePad