Tuesday, August 31, 2010
Fun with Word(le)
Someone on twitter (sorry I can't remember who!) pointed me to this cool word site--www.Wordle.com puts text into beautiful puzzles of your most common words. I used the first 8 pages of my current MS. I have to say, I find it pretty appropriate and it doesn't look like I'm using a ton of passive words.
I love it! The only challenge was figuring out how to get it to reappear here--no convenient "share" button. But, hey, I learned how to make a screen shot and convert it into a .jpg. :)
Go try it and report back!
Posted by Kristine Asselin at 6:00 AM 8 comments
Sunday, August 29, 2010
Bobby Sherman and saddleshoes
Sometimes a picture is worth a thousand words--cliche, I know. But it's true. Take an old picture of yourself and look at it. Really look at it. What is that little person thinking? What about the old Bobby Sherman lunchbox does she particularly love? What is that first day of school going to be like?
In honor of second graders everywhere, I give you: me. On the first day of second grade. Complete with Bobby Sherman lunchbox and saddle shoes. I honestly don't remember having an undying love for Bobby--but there it is. Just look at that lunchbox. That's love. No second grader carries a lunchbox like that without love. There must be a story there somewhere.

I think I need to look up Bobby Sherman's greatest hits on iTunes. In the meantime, enjoy this video performance of "Easy Come, Easy Go."
Positively swoon worthy...those moves are made of awesome. That hair. The leather pants. I'm having a flashback of why I must have loved Bobby Sherman. I dare the Jonas Brothers or Justin Bieber to pull off that look. :)
Posted by Kristine Asselin at 3:29 PM 5 comments
Saturday, August 28, 2010
Making history come alive in nonfiction
Earlier in the week, I visited the Old North Bridge and the Minuteman National Park. The Park Rangers there are wonderful in their vivid descriptions of what happened at the Old North Bridge between the Minute Men and the Redcoats--"the shot heard round the world."
I'm working on a nonfiction work-for-hire piece right now about the colonial period--and it's been challenging to make the text fun and interesting for the target grade-level. Witnessing history so vividly helps make it come alive and will hopefully help me make it come alive for my readers!
The research is important, but sometimes getting out of the house and out from behind the computer can help break through the writer's block.
Posted by Kristine Asselin at 7:57 AM 1 comments
Labels: Non-Fiction, research
Thursday, August 26, 2010
My first review--School Library Journal
Posted by Kristine Asselin at 11:00 AM 7 comments
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
How I Write: Interview with Children's Author John Lance
Posted by Kristine Asselin at 6:00 AM 9 comments
Labels: author interviews, Charlotte Cauldron, How I write, inpiring authors, John Lance
Saturday, August 21, 2010
My Summer Reading List
If I stop to think about it, I've read more than I thought this summer. I thought I'd share!
ETERNAL ON THE WATER by Joe Monninger - this was a book I read for my book club, but Joe also happens to be related to a friend of mine and I've read several of his YA novels. It's a wonderful and sweet love story.
PROPHECY OF DAYS by Christy Raedeke - I earned this book with my WIBIJ win back in June. It's a fun, action-filled novel about a contemporary girl who finds herself chasing a ancient Mayan mystery. She emails, texts, had a hot guy friend and a pet monkey. I'm looking forward to the sequel!
NATHANIEL FLOOD: BEASTOLOGIST by RL LaFevers- my daughter and I read the first two in the fun MG series and are waiting happily for the third to be out this fall.
SEPTIMUS HEAP by Angie Sage - we've had this series on audio book in the house for the better part of August. It's slower paced than Harry Potter and it's a more distant third person--omniscient narrator. I don't feel like I know the characters really well--but it's a good story, with characters who are likable. My precocious seven-year-old likes it--and the narrator Gerard Doyle is wonderful.
THE SISTERS GRIMM: FAIRY TALE DETECTIVES by Michael Buckley - we listened to this whole series (except #8) on audio CD as well. The aforementioned 7 yo loved it--and listened to each book several times, but it was probably my least favorite book(s) of the summer. I didn't love the narrator (he read with an almost sarcastic quality to his voice), and the subject matter sometimes delved darker than I was expecting fairy tale characters to go (addiction, pregnancy loss, death of Sleeping Beauty).
WILL GRAYSON, WILL GRAYSON by John Green and David Levithan - this book seemed to be everywhere I turned for a while--I finally picked it up at the library. It was sweet, poignant, and funny. I loved it.
HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS by JK Rowling - I've had the audio book in my car all summer and have listened to it again in preparation for the movie coming out in December. I find that I cry at different points every time I listen--this time the biggest cry fest came when Lupin announces the birth of Teddy in Shell Cottage, and when Percy comes out of the hallway in the Room of Requirement--and I cried for Snape for the first time. Oh, and I always sob when Ron comes back--but then I'm a Ron fangirl. I just love Jim Dale's narration--and the story is so deeply satisfying and rich.
So for someone who didn't have a lot of time to read this summer, I did pretty well. There were bunches of books I didn't get to that are still on my table--I just cracked SETH BAUMGARTNER'S LOVE MANIFESTO by Eric Luper because parts of it take place on a golf course. And LINGER by Maggie Stiefvater is waiting for me, as is HUNGER GAMES by Suzanne Collins (I know, I'm the only one who hasn't read it yet.)
What have you read this summer?
Posted by Kristine Asselin at 8:18 AM 3 comments
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
How I Write: Classes and other Resources
It's been a great and productive summer. We've been to writeoncon.com, I'm waist deep in a work-for-hire project, and I'm querying my first novel! I can't believe we're at our tenth installment of the How I Write series, brainchild of Ansha Kotyk. A group of writers are writing about how we write – scheduled for Wednesdays through August. Please check back weekly. And click here for the list of all the writers participating and links to their blogs.
This week we're talking about classes we've taken, and resources we've used. Where do I start?
I haven't taken a ton of writing classes, but what I have taken has been great. Keep in mind, you don't have to spend a ton of money, enroll in an MFA program, or travel out of your living room to take a great class.
1. Rose's Colored Glass -- I took a plotting class with these ladies and it was great. Great excel charts to use (best dig them out for the WIP, me thinks). Very affordable.
2. WriterU -- a wonderful resource of great online classes--very affordable. The class I took was on rhetorical devices w/ Margie Lawson. Fab-U-Lous.
3. Kinship Writers In-session. Boston area writer's resource. Critique session with nine attendees and a local industry pro (in our case, in February, 2010, Lauren MacLeod of Strothman Agency spent the day with us). Less than $100 for the day. Fab-U-Lous times Awesome.
4. SCBWI--workshops and conferences. Well worth the money. Do it. And pay for a critique. I go to my regional annually. The workshops are high quality, networking is stellar.
5. Writeoncon.com--I've got to mention it, even though it's over for this year. Bookmark the site, and go next year if you didn't this year. FREE. And made of Awesome. :)
5. Don't sneeze at a regular 'ole critique group--can be as good as a class.
Reading books on craft can also be helpful--thought I have to say I work better in the classroom, even if it's virtual. I mentioned books last week--I think I was a week early. Here they are again, my favorite craft books, er, I mean books on craft (doesn't 'craft books' sound like I'm going to whip out the origami or knitting needles? But I digress...)
1. Writing the Breakout Novel by Donald Maass
2.The Writer's Journey by Christopher Vogler
3. Plot and Structure by James Scott Bell
4. Novel Metamorphosis by Darcy Pattison
Writing is a craft. It is something that can be learned, improved, perfected, enhanced. But you have to practice your craft. Take a class. Read a book. Google "how to write a novel" if you have to. Join a critique group. Go to a conference. I promise you will learn something. :)
Posted by Kristine Asselin at 6:00 AM 6 comments
Labels: classes, craft, How I write, resources
Friday, August 13, 2010
Writeoncon Aftermath
Whew. I can't believe how drained I am after Writeoncon. It makes me even more amazed at the energy and dedication of the organizers.
I made some great connections with new friends, read a ton of fabulous YA queries and first pages, watched a couple wicked cool live chats by agents Natalie Fischer and Jennifer Laughran. And read a bunch of great advice from industry professionals.
I'm still surfing over to the forums page to read!
Things I learned:
1. I'm not the only one writing a sporty-girl book (yeah for sporty girls!)
2. After participating in a query critique offered by Natalie, I'm rewriting my query to focus more on my protagonists journey rather than "getting the boy ". (Thanks Natalie--it's going to be much better!)
3. I really like the writerly community--and I'm proud to be a part of it.
Thanks to the organizers, the participants, the agents and editors, and the behind the scenes crew who made it all happen.
Posted by Kristine Asselin at 2:04 PM 6 comments
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
How I Write: Knowing When to Query
Welcome to the ninth installment of the How I Write series, brainchild of Ansha Kotyk. A group of writers are writing about how we write – scheduled for Wednesdays through August. Please check back weekly. And click here for the list of all the writers participating and links to their blogs.
Does anyone ever know when to query? The standard advice is DON'T. Query that is. Until...
1. you have a finished manuscript
2. your ms has been read by your crit group and revised accordingly
3. you've shelved it for six weeks and then read it out loud to yourself
4. you literally can't make it better
But really, when is it ready? I think my ms is ready--it's been in Queryland since June. I've taken a wee break from querying for Writeoncon.com. But it's full speed ahead next week.
I think it's also about knowing when you're ready yourself. My dh pointed out last night (as I was on my way to my book club) that the querying is taking a toll on me. "You're supposed to be the calm one. Have a glass of wine. Or two." Now I hadn't realized my stress was leaking out of me.
Does that mean I'm not ready? No. It just means I need to give myself permission (thank you Molly O'Neill) to step away from the computer and relax. And work on other things.
How do you know when your ms is ready? How do you know when YOU are ready?
Posted by Kristine Asselin at 6:49 AM 7 comments
Labels: How I write, queries
Monday, August 9, 2010
Agent Dreams
Has anyone had one? I mean, an honest-to-goodness, real-deal, agent dream? Not just a daydream you have when you're waiting for the blog to load, or twitter to update. One that you wake up and remember.
Yeah. I did. Have a dream about an agent, I mean. I won't tell you who I dreamed about it, but suffice to say the person is a stellar agent. Who. I. Would. Love. To. Rep. Me.
She was in my house, on my laptop, giving me advice about my blog. Wish I could remember the advice. :)
I think I'm not getting enough sleep.
#mightbegoingcrazythissummer
Posted by Kristine Asselin at 10:07 AM 5 comments
Saturday, August 7, 2010
Getting Back in the Game
It's so easy to be distracted while querying--all the pretty lights blogs and twitter accounts and querying websites and forums, etc., etc.
I've had a really hard time getting used to the TIME querying takes. Yes, there are the quick agents who come back with "NO" very fast. But I've decided I like the ones who take their time more. Yeah, it's great to get a lightning-fast reply...but really, did that agent who responded in 20 minutes really read my sample pages? Even if I did target well?
I've been lucky enough to be assigned a work-for-hire project this summer. Actually two. And I've had to get myself to the library--force myself to do the research--write and update an outline--put my butt in the chair (pandora.com blaring on my headphones)--actually write words on a page.
It feels good. And I'm working. Of course I still check twitter, but hey, going cold turkey is hard.
Anyway, my advice for the day--try to distract your subconscious. Work on something else. Even if it's a blog post. ;)
Posted by Kristine Asselin at 3:53 PM 6 comments
Thursday, August 5, 2010
You Wish Contest
Did that get your attention? Well, it should have. CA Marshall is hosting a contest and giving away a signed copy of Mandy Hubbard's YOU WISH--and unless you've been living under a rock, you know how cool this book is going to be.
I've been pretty lucky recently with book giveaways--I won at the SCBWI blog a couple of weeks ago and I also won a couple of books at Tara's Bodacious Pen. So I hope my luck continues.
On a personal note--Mandy is a class act. She's not only a writer, but a literary agent active on twitter and her own blog. And while she won't be my agent, at least not for the current MS, she did give me some nice compliments on my writing after she read my full. And I love her for that!
If you're a YA writer--I'd encourage you to query her. Check her blog for what she's looking for (I believe YA romance, in particular!) Oh, and read her work--she's a great writer!
Posted by Kristine Asselin at 6:54 AM 5 comments
Wednesday, August 4, 2010
How I Write: Revision Part 2
Welcome to the eighth installment of the How I Write series, brainchild of Ansha Kotyk. A group of writers are writing about how we write – scheduled for Wednesdays through August. Please check back weekly. And click here for the list of all the writers participating and links to their blogs.
This week, we're delving deeper into Revision - first pass, resources, critique groups. We've talked about writing a first draft and revising it--how do we delve deeper into revisions?
I'm sure my colleagues will have more comprehensive strategies for deep revision--I'm still making my way through the journey of novel writing and I'm still figuring this thing out. I've got a shelf full of craft books -- some that I love, some that haven't helped so much.
These are my favorites:
1. Writing the Breakout Novel by Donald Maass
2.The Writer's Journey by Christopher Vogler
3. Plot and Structure by James Scott Bell
4. Novel Metamorphosis by Darcy Pattison
Better than all the books in my library are the ladies in my critique group--my cheer leading team, my writing partners, my task force, my confidantes, my beta readers. If you don't have a critique group or partner--do whatever you can to get one. Check on absolutewrite.com, or Verla Kay's "blue board"--lots of people advertise for critique partners.
These friends are responsible for the major revisions and breakthroughs I've had on my novel this past year. ::hugs:: to Ansha, Laura, and Jennifer.
Other great resources? Agent blogs (see my sidebar for helpful links), Querytracker, VerlaKay.com, and countless author blogs and websites. Browse, google -- you've got to find what works for you.
I firmly believe that writing is a craft--one that you can practice and improve. We should always keep learning from our peers, our mentors, our partners, and professionals in the field. They make us work harder and get better all the time.
Posted by Kristine Asselin at 6:00 AM 3 comments
Labels: How I write, revision









