What's wrong with being generous? What's wrong with allowing a reader to peel a story like the petticoats on a 1950s teeny-bopper, revealing character and plot layer by layer, in all their fullness and richness? I mean, there are plenty of famous novels and current bestsellers by top authors that take their time for the story to surface, right?
Well, famous works and established authors face a different reality than unpublished writers. Reputation or a history with readers can buy their stories the time to ease into things. But if you're unpublished and trying to land a literary agent, your reality is the hundreds of submissions an agent receives and the chore it becomes to crawl through them, looking for reasons to reject while at the same time hoping for a story worth reading. They're looking for professional-level storytelling.
2 Best of A Writer's Life Blog
Tayari's blog bursts with soul and a big writer's heart. This week's she's saddened over the closing of Karibu bookstores, an African American readers icon, as well as sharing her passion for red velvet cake.
I am just heartbroken to announce the closing of Karibu Books in Washington, DC and Maryland. This announcement took me by surprise although I have heard, as often as everyone, that Americans don't read anymore and big chains are snuffing out the little guys. Sigh.
Bestselling Brice, who will be releasing a novel next month speaks about Martin Luther's King, Jr's legacy and the democratic convention underlying debate are black women, black or female?
Walk Tall is a dream I had a long time ago. Fourteen years ago actually. My mother had recently died, and I was doing freelance PR. I was leaving a meeting to set up free prostate cancer screenings at a church on behalf of the American Cancer Society. I was driving down Colorado Boulevard and this voice in my head said, "You should write a book of affirmations for people of color." I was near 1st Avenue and swerved into the far right lane so I could turn west and go to Tattered Cover (it used to be located in Cherry Creek). That day I bought a book called How to Write a Book Proposal and went home and told everyone I was going to write a book. Just like that. (There's a funny/sad story about that book that I talk about in the new intro to Walk Tall.)
I hope you enjoy these blogs this week and come back here to tell me what you think. Now I have to get to writing myself. :)
Dee
1 comments:
Oh thank you! I am so glad the blog is helpful to you. ((HUG))
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