In honor of my 100th blog post, I want to share 100 things I wouldn’t know if I’d never become a children’s writer.
- Follow submission guidelines like you are assembling a nuclear warhead. No fudging.
- Trends are to be watched, not followed.
- Focus on what you’re doing well. Do more of that.
- A synopsis is as much for your benefit as it is the editor’s.
- Writing is reductive. Writing should be like a sale at the GAP–it should always be 20% off. (Mo Willems)
- Waiting for opportunities is fiddle faddle. Create them.
- Don’t ask too much of a first chapter. It’s an invitation to the reader and an opportunity to assure her you can be trusted. (Andrew Karre)
- Query letters are the most important and least read letter you’ll ever write.
- Show a character’s feelings through reactions.
- Just about everybody struggles with jealousy. I am jealous of those who don’t.
- Picture books are an art form unto themselves.
- Query letters need to sound like your real voice, not a superficial marketing pitch.
- Joining a critique group can be a game changer.
- Having a social media presence is important, but don’t let it infringe on your writing time.
- Always send thank you notes.
- Scene = Time + Place + One Change (Candace Fleming)
- Having beautiful file folders makes revision more funner. More fun, that is.
- Do not bother with Goodreads.
- Use index cards to map out scenes in a novel.
- For novels, ask–what is the job of this chapter?
- Facebook can really mess with your head.
- Follow-up with queries and submissions. You did the sending after all.
- Keep in touch with the editors, agents and participants you meet at conferences.
- Small workshops are often more worthwhile than big conferences.
- Back up your files and back up your back up files.
- Write what you know.
- Write what you wish you knew.
- Look for the seeds to resolving your story’s conflict within the story itself.
- Characters have been alive a long time before they introduced themselves to you.
- Writing costs money, time and energy. It’s worth it.
- If you feel stuck in your genre of choice, shake things up by writing in a different one.
- Everybody wants to quit at some point.
- Giving back doubles the investment you’ve made in your own writing.
- The journey to publication is not a race.
- Take thank you notes with you to conferences so you can thank people right away.
- Identifying (and eradicating) your crutch words can help to tighten your writing. Find/replace is your friend.
- Print out your entire novel in 8 pt. font, highlight the “solid” parts, then spread it out to see where the plot sags. (Thanks, Darcy Pattison)
- One carry-on bag is really all you need.
- Characters must undergo an inner and outer journey.
- Resist the urge to hide during conferences.
- Talk about your dreams and ambitions.
- Having a blog is fun work.
- You don’t have to start a novel with a big bang. Let the reader get to know the character before the inciting incident.
- Flying solo isn’t heroic. It’s nonsense.
- In a query letter, use quotes from the book to show character. (Christy Ottaviano)
- Your first idea is not unique. Twist it.
- Accept critiques with grace.
- Give critiques with humility.
- An editor’s job is to help clarify what your book is about.
- When you read, read like a writer.
- Give the same amount of care to world building/setting as you do to creating characters.
- A good cup of tea can fix a lot of things.
- Progress is the difference between finding time to write and making time to write.
- We write to re-write. And then to re-write what we re-wrote.
- Editors and agents are people too.
- Writing is an act of revelation. (Cynthia Leitich Smith)
- Use Find & Replace to weed out those just so very, very, very useless words.
- Your family may never grasp that staring off in space in part of the writing process.
- Writing will drive you to do otherwise loathsome tasks like cleaning the refrigerator (at your neighbor’s house because you’ve already cleaned yours. Oh, and organized your sock drawer. Twice.)
- Writing makes every life experience—from fixing a flat to flying in a helicopter–fodder for future writing.
- Disappointment is standard issue.
- You can always quit. No one is forcing you to write.
- Reading at open mic is a hoot. (I mean this.)
- Figure out a way to remember names (for when you go to conferences). You’re a word person. You can do this.
- There are two kinds of non-writing people—those who are in awe of you and those who think anyone can be a writer, especially for children. Don’t worry about either kind.
- Pretend to be confident. You may be a shy person, but that’s no one’s business but your own.
- Rejection sucks.
- There are three effective ways to make rejection suck less. I don’t know what those ways are.
- Readers bond with characters when we ask them to stretch. (Cynthia Leitich Smith)
- When you get stuck, stop. Move on to something new or take a nap. Let your mind wrestle with the knots a while before you go back.
- Writing is like wood carving. You go from larger to smaller, so don’t focus on details first.
- Most parents only get to name two, three, maybe four or so people. Writers get to name lots of people. Cool.
- Characters may push you. Let them.
- Grammar matters. At least know the rules before you snap them.
- Be respectful to everyone, even (and especially) on social media.
- Stories must balance between the specific and the universal.
- It’s important not to have a sense of preciousness with your work. (Shaun Tan)
- In writing, the author is the third wheel. You’re in the way. No one wants you there. You need to be invisible. (Mo Willems)
- Laughing at your own writing is a great feeling, so long as you were intending to be funny.
- Writers cannot emotionally protect themselves. (Coe Booth)
- It’s important to love my secondary characters as much as my main characters.
- Reinvention is the dark chocolate in the writer’s life. (Jane Yolen)
- Secondary characters can’t simply exist to serve the main character’s story.
- Don’t let details overwhelm or derail a story.
- Before you begin drafting a novel, create character sketches by interviewing each character.
- Stay out of a character’s head as long as possible. (Andrew Karre)
- Invest in your friendships with other writers. It will always, always be worth it.
- Pay attention to what kids do, enjoy and worry about now. Some things never change, but not everything.
- No one wears a T-shirt with their favorite plot on it. Readers fall in love with characters.
- A writer’s validation has to come from what her work means to a reader and not from reviews or awards. (Ed Spicer)
- Reliable WiFi and a laptop with a light up keyboard are splendid things.
- Create a room in your home (or at least a zone) that’s for writing only.
- The feel of book pitch needs to match the tone of the story.
- Something as ordinary as weather can be used to impact the mood of a story. [Cue the thunder-clap.]
- To learn about my characters, I need to ask where am “I” in my writing. (Coe Booth)
- You can write an entire novel without once using a semi-colon.
- Ultimately, the purpose of storytelling is to remind us of something ordinary or familiar. (Shaun Tan)
- Generally speaking, chocolate will not fill plot holes. But it can’t hurt to try.
- Brilliance strikes two seconds after you hit send on a submission.
- Everything takes longer than you think it will. Even reading lists.
The list could surely go on, and there is nothing more wonderful than a list, instrument of wondrous hypotyposis. ~ Umberto Eco