Showing posts with label C. Hope Clark. Show all posts
Showing posts with label C. Hope Clark. Show all posts

Sunday, August 11, 2019

Some authors and poets who will be present for A Day for Writers. Deadline is August 19.


Ed Southern, Executive Director for NC Writers' Network. Photo made in Sylva, NC at City Lights Books some years ago when Ed was new on the job. He was the first Exe. Director to visit us here in the mountains. He will be with us on August 24 for A Day for Writers.

Carol Crawford, carolcrawfordediting.com is a writer and a teacher as well as an editor. Her students always gain important knowledge about writing when attending classes with Carol.
Joseph Bathanti 
Poet, novelist, and award-winning writer and educator. I hear from writers and poets who know him. They all like him. He will be with us on August 24 in Sylva at the Jackson County Public Library for A Day for Writers.



Writers, from back, left, Joan Howard, Brenda Kay Ledford, Mary Ricketson, Diana Smith at Carol Crawford's Blue Ridge Writers' Conference . Janice Moore sits in front. Even seasoned writers and poets know the value of attending writing conferences.
Pat Vestal has a history in publishing and play writing. Her plays have been published in NYC.
This is the cover of one of C. Hope Clark's mysteries. The main character is female and Clark's books are page-turners.

Sunday, August 4, 2019

A Day for Writers 2019 in Sylva at the Jackson County Library


NCWN-West and the Jackson County Regional Public Library will host A Day for Writers in Sylva, NC on Saturday, August 24. 

It has always been the goal of this program to bring the best to the west with reasonable fees so all writers in the mountains can benefit from membership without traveling long distances.

C. Hope Clark, author of two mystery series is keynote speaker. Clark’s 35,000 readers of her Funds for Writers Newsletter give her much credit for their success. Clark will speak on marketing and on writing the novel.

Poets will enjoy Joseph Bathanti, poet laureate of North Carolina, 2012 – 2014. He is Writer-in-Residence of Appalachian State University’s Watauga Residential College in Boone, NC. Bathanti, author of ten poetry books, is recipient of the 2016 North Carolina Award in Literature. His most recent volume is The 13th Sunday after Pentecost (LSU Press, 2016).
Joseph Bathanti, Poet

David Joy, novelist, will present Writing Centered in Place/Landscape as Character. His books are highly praised as a voice of Appalachia. He is the author of the Edgar nominated novel Where All Light Tends To Go (Putnam, 2015), as well as the novels The Weight Of This World (Putnam, 2017) and The Line That Held Us (Putnam, 2018). His memoir Growing Gills: A Fly Fisherman's Journey (Bright Mountain Books, 2011), was a finalist for the Reed Environmental Writing Award and the Ragan Old North State Award. 

Patricia Vestal and Katie Winkler will teach how to write a ten minute play. Both of these writers have had plays produced on stage. Katie Winkler has taught English composition and British literature for over 23 years at Blue Ridge Community College. During that time, she has been active with the college's drama department as a writer, actor, and director. Pat Vestal’s plays were done off-off Broadway and were on NYC TV. She taught play-writing at the college level.



Carol Crawford who owns www.carolcrawfordediting.com and is a well-published nonfiction writer as well as poet, will teach what to do before you submit your manuscript. Carol teaches writing at the John C. Campbell Folk School. She is the author of The Habit of Mercy, Poems about Daughters and Mothers. Her essays and short stories have been published in numerous journals. She has been program coordinator for the annual Blue Ridge Writers’ Conference since its inception in 1996. 


Karen Paul Holmes, poet and teacher, will discuss Metaphors, Images and Similes. Holmes has two full-length poetry collections, No Such Thing as Distance (Terrapin, 2018) and Untying the Knot (Aldrich, 2014). She was chosen a Best Emerging Poet by Stay Thirsty Media and appeared in their 2019 collection of 22 poets including Billy Collins and Robert Pinsky. 

Karen Paul Holmes



Writers may join NCWN at the time of registration. 
Member fees for the conference are $65. 
Non-members pay $78.  Student fee is $35. 
Coffee, pastries, soft drinks, water and lunch are included.


Find the registration form on the sidebar at  www.netwestwriters.blogspot.com. Complete the  form and mail with your check to NCWN-West, %Glenda Beall, PO Box 843, Hayesville, NC 28904 or register online at www.ncwriters.org

Deadline for mail in and online registrations is August 19. Contact Glenda Beall, gcbmountaingirl@gmail.com for more information

C. Hope Clark, Keynote Speaker for A  Day for Writers  

.


Saturday, March 30, 2019

Guest Post by C. Hope Clark, award-winning author of two mystery series


Freelance Short Writing: a Path to Book Sales


Everyone reads short pieces, whether on their phone, online, or in picking up a magazine from the grocery store. Our free time comes in snatches these days, so we tend to prefer our reading material shorter.

As a matter of fact, the attention span of readers is decreasing. Nicholas Carr argued in his Pulitzer-Prize nominated book The Shallows: What the Internet is Doing to Our Brains, that technology has altered how we read. Readers have lost the ability to deep read, where the reader is absorbed, taking it in without distractions.

Therefore, the writer. . . any writer. . . ought to capitalize on this trend to put their name, brand, and titles before those readers by writing short pieces. It’s called freelancing.

As editor of FundsforWriters, I’ve preached that every writer, all kinds, should freelance as part of their effort to be seen and read. To only write books, and hope that readers find your book, is a frustrating endeavor resulting in few sales. What sells books is commercials, or rather, short introductions to the fact you write books or wrote a particular book. Blurbs, advertisements, blog mentions, online word-of-mouth, interviews. . . and articles.

To say you wrote a book means nothing unless you are famous. 
To say you have a book for sale means little unless you pander to the cheap side of the market. But to entice serious readers means you introduce them to your writing ability. If you cannot get your book in their hands easily, then do so via the avenues of freelance feature writing.

Freelancing used to be restricted to magazines
Today, you have the options of newsletters, blogs, podcasts, social media, and weekly newspapers, both online and paper, with all of them connected with links. And magazines aren’t just national glossies. Frankly, you gain more traction with regional and local publications. What does it matter if your piece is read by 5,000 people locally or nationally?

With today’s reading habits, readers choose short reading first, saving longer reading for more specific times, days, or even weekends or vacations. Yet, throughout the week, they are inhaling short piece after short piece. So how can you, a book author, snag a piece of the shorter action to help sell your books?
Prove how savvy you write by pitching pieces to these publications. 

Connect the piece somehow to what you’ve published.
Be slick and savvy about it, please. No infomercials. For instance, I write a mystery series set on Edisto Beach, having just released the fifth book, Dying on Edisto, in March 2019. In order to promote it, I have and will continue to write short pieces on:
· How setting can become a character.
· How to legally use real setting in fiction.
· How to use multiple POVs in serial fiction.
· Why Edisto Beach is the perfect vacation beach.
· How I manage writing full time.
· Wildlife on Edisto.
· How I was bribed into being a mystery writer. (I met my federal agent husband on a bribery investigation.)
· The best bookstore in South Carolina (the Edisto Bookstore, of course).
· Tax write-offs for a writer (to include my beach visits to Edisto).



Those are just general topics. This Spring, I’ll have a feature in Visiting Edisto Beach, Explore Edisto, and at least 40 blogs using these and many more ideas. How do you find these markets?

     Do an online search for publications, blogs, newsletters on the sorts of topics affiliated with the book or subjects you specialize in.
     Do an online search for the publications in your town, your region, then the state.
     Ask your social media connections if they are seeking blog posts, or know of others who are.
     Take note in restaurants and grocery stores for local periodicals.
     Take note of bookstores for broader geographically-reaching periodicals.
     Contact your college newspapers and magazines.
     Seek avenues in your employer’s newsletter, magazine, blog, or website.
     Connect with your peers for suggestions, or get them to recommend you to venues they know.


·         Go over the blogs and online magazines you read, whether or not they are affiliated with your topics. You can write about anything.

If you can write for pay anywhere, do it. Challenge yourself to cover a topic they like or need, and if it cannot connect directly to your book, then just include the book’s release or availability in the byline. Make this byline part of your contract if you agree to write that piece for compensation. Just include it if you are writing for free.

The question may arise: Why write about nothing to do with my book (or other writing)?
Answer: Because more people will read your byline in that publication in one weekend than will find and read your book in a year. And if that byline mentions your book or other brand, then you’ve not only been paid for writing, not only avoided paying for an advertisement, but you’ve also proven to someone how beautiful or intelligently you write, hopefully intriguing them to read more than this one story.

You are seeking respect as a writer, first and foremost, regardless of what you write. And if someone likes your short piece, they just might consider your book. And it cost you not a thing to make the effort.
Just like I wrote this piece.


 C. Hope Clark’s latest release is Dying on Edisto, Book 5 of the Edisto Island Mysteries. She has also authored one other award-winning mystery series and is working on another. She founded FundsforWriters.com, selected by Writer’s Digest for its 101 Best Websites for Writers for 18 years. Her newsletter reaches 35,000 readers. www.fundsforwriters.com / www.chopeclark.com
Find Clark's books at the links below.





Saturday, November 10, 2018

PROSE WRITERS - THIS IS FOR YOU

C. Hope Clark, author of mystery series, creator of Funds for Writers, has written an article for www.blacklilackitty.wordpress.com and it is a free writing lesson. She writes about problems of beginning writers and gives detailed information on how to cure those problems. Read this. You might learn something that could be very helpful.


"Rather than telling the reader what’s going on, my students could now make the reader experience what the character does, when the character does it, tallying the stimuli in an attempt to reach some sort of summation about that point in the story."  C. Hope Clark

https://blacklilackitty.wordpress.com/2018/05/08/the-writing-lesson-a-guest-post-by-c-hope-clark/