Thursday, 30 March 2023

To Market to Market – by Ruth Bonetti

Hands up who loves Book PR? 

Quite… Don’t rush me. 

 

Let’s try a new slant. 

Create opportunities to interest potential readers. If they don’t know about your books it’s no wonder sales languish. 

 


Opportunities for a live book launch dried in past years. Many creative authors offer virtual book launches. Offer prizes. Showcase. 

 

BOOK SIGNINGS

Talk with book shop colleagues like Kirsten Hart, Store Manager at Koorong Books Toowoomba. Where Anne Hamilton along with others and myself  will share a signing session on Saturday April 29 at 11am, Centrepoint on James, Shop 3, 37 Prescott St, Toowoomba.


Get together with writing buddies to brainstorm how you can create an event. After such a productive session, fuelled by much coffee, Brisbane Omega Showcase emerged. Put August 11-12 in your diary for a writer's conference that showcases local talent and is also a learning experience. At the Coopers Colonial Motel at Acacia Ridge. Look out for some announcements, TBC. 

 

MULTI-TASK

Is it just me, or is this normal? Do we all burn pots on the stove while cribbing a little creative time? Deadlines like this blog by 5am Wednesday…If only authors had time to focus on the next w-i-p! Reality is bread and butter work intrudes. I reassure myself that my subconscious ticks away while I’m busy preparing for music performances next weekend with Noosa Orchestra


If you are able, come surf at Noosa (while I crib last minute practice) then enjoy uplifting music after.

 

PEOPLE TIME And family time. 

The demands vary as offspring grow older, as some are blessed to embark on grand parenting. So that book baby can wait. To everything there is a SEASON.

And so it is for any creative, whatever their medium. Indulge me while I share our excitement for eldest son’s break-through world premiere of his composition in the Sydney Opera House. In a glowing review: Paul-Antoni Bonetti’s The Bright Day Clarion Calls the Quaking Earth, premiering as part of the Sydney Symphony Orchestra's 50 Fanfares Project that commissioned new music from 50 Australian composers, was an unexpected gem...a powerful, cinematic, and instantly likeable piece of music that didn’t feel out of place among these American greats."


                                                        Photo Credit: Megan Bonetti

 

This is the son who initially didn't pursue music teaching – until he met his lovely wife and embraced fatherhood and a mortgage. Who doubtless pulled many an all-light vigil to complete and finesse his composition. 

 

The Chinese bamboo tree during the first five years of its growth, puts out a tiny shoot which needs regular watering.  In that time, all of its development is underground and, to all intents and purposes, it seems like absolutely nothing is happening. However, at the end of five years, it suddenly puts on a fantastic growth spurt and in a space of five weeks, it grows to over 30 metres tall.


Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with all your might. 
And TRUST YOUR SEASONS  

ABOUT Ruth BONETTI 

ABOUT Ruth Bonetti

Ruth's many earlier books give practical support for confident performance of words and music, drawing on a lifetime of experience as a musician and educator. Her Trilogy Midnight Sun to Southern Cross has won awards including the CALEB Nonfiction prize. 
Available: Amazon, Bookdepository etc. Autographed copies from ruthbonetti.com and http://www.ruthbonetti.com/burn-my-letters/ 
Facebook: Ruth Bonetti
Burn My Letters: Karl Johan Back
Blog (occasional)
Ruth founded Omega Writers in 1992. 

Thursday, 23 March 2023

The Next 5000 Years!

 by Anusha Atukorala




I love visiting my local library. I return home bringing bulging bagfuls of brilliant beautiful bountiful books! On a recent visit to the library, I found a novel based on a writer’s retreat. Four strangers turned up at a resort, set in a beautiful location. Each attendee had their own room with all their meals provided. The writing instructor who was staying in a cottage next door, turned up each morning to give them several hours of her time and to set writing tasks for them. 



One young woman who turned up at the retreat put me off completely. She was egocentric. She was loud. She was self-obsessed. But then … as I read the back story of her life, I discovered that she’d grown up in a dysfunctional home, and had not received much nurturing. No wonder this seemingly obnoxious young woman behaved as she did! My thoughts about her flipped a 180 degrees! I felt sad realising how hard her life had been! I even started to like her and wanted her to do well. I loved how the author showed us that there are reasons why people act in difficult or surprising ways.

 

And that’s what we writers are called to do, isn’t it? We tell the world what really goes on. What motivations drive people. How complex our world is. That we can’t judge others on their exterior alone without getting to know their life story. Reading fiction is known to help people learn social skills and empathy and I can understand why. Getting into our characters heads and hearts is always good for us, isn’t it – not only as writers but also as readers?

 


We Christian writers do many different things. We might expose our readers’ minds to life, truth and the meaning of the universe! We may educate, challenge and inspire. We sometimes teach and instruct. We brighten our readers’ dark times with hope. We entertain. Make readers smile. Drop lightness into their being. We remind them that things are not always what they seem. 


We show them the ugly parts of our world and tell it like it is. We display the need for justice in a fallen world. We even have the joy of giving a glimpse of spiritual truth. A Christ-centered worldview. We open our readers’ minds to the reality of the kingdom of God and to the Light of the world. Jesus.

 



What kind of impact would you like your books would make? Back in 2007, God called me to write for Him. He asked me to comfort those going through tough seasons so they could learn to dance in the rain. It thrilled my heart to do just that and to point them to Jesus. 

But recently … while listening to a podcast, a comment that the speaker (Dallas Willard) made, was a torch, shining a new beam of understanding into my calling. Dallas asked us what we wanted to do 500 years from now in heaven as we reign with Jesus. 5000 years from now. 10,000 years from now! Now, there’s a challenge! And here I was, unable to think beyond the next 6 months! Wow!


I realised with a start that because life in heaven is perfect, there would be no need for me to comfort and strengthen others through my writing in that celestial city. LIFE after life will be all beauty and light and joy. 


No more stormy weather! (Isn’t that wonderful?)


And so from 2023, I’ve thought beyond my earthly existence to what I’d love to keep doing in eternity. I might as well practice now, don’t you think? So my writing has expanded. Not only to encourage people going through tough times but also to write about living life well as we frolic in the sunshine ... the sunshine of the kingdom of God.

 

It was deeply encouraging that the first two blogs I wrote for the year in this new vein, had plenty of reader engagement. It was God’s endorsement to me that I am on the right track. Thank You God! And … what about you, dear friend? What burning issues has God placed on your heart to share with His world? Not just for the present but for heaven and the new heavens and the new earth? What would you like to do in eternity? In the next 500 years? The next 5000?

 

As believers, we prepare for eternity by living our lives the way Jesus called us to – seeking first His kingdom and His righteousness. Becoming more like Jesus. But then … as Christian writers too, we need to prepare for eternity so we can make the cosmos to ring with glory to our amazing Saviour! And learn from Him how best we can reign with God in His kingdom forever and ever!

 


What do YOU think?

 

“And they sang a new song, saying: “You are worthy to take the

 scroll and to open its seals, because you were slain, and with

 your blood you purchased for God, persons from every tribe

 and language and people and nation.

 

You have made them to be a kingdom and priests to serve our

God, and they will reign on the earth.” Rev 5:9-10

 



Anusha’s been on many interesting detours in life, as a lab technician, a computer programmer, a full time Mum, a full time volunteer, a charity director, a full time job chaser, until one golden day (or was it a dark moonless night?) God tapped her on her shoulder and called her to write for Him. She has never recovered from the joy it brought her. She loves to see others enjoying life with Jesus and does her mite to hurry the process in her world through her writing and through her life. The goodness of God is her theme song through each season, as she dances in the rain with Jesus.

 

Her first book Enjoying the Journey contains 75 little God stories that will bring you closer to your Creator. Her 2nd book ‘Dancing in the Rain’ brings you hope and comfort for life’s soggy seasons. Her 3rd book, ‘Sharing the Journey’ is a sequel to 'Enjoying the Journey'.

 


Do drop in on her two websites to say G’day! She’d love to connect with you.

Dancing in the Rain - https://anusha-atukorala.webnode.com/

Light in the Darkness- https://light-in-the-darkness00.webnode.com/

 



Monday, 20 March 2023

Omega Writers | Call for 2023 CALEB Award Judges

It is almost time for the 2023 CALEB Awards from Omega Writers.

CALEB stands for Christian Authors Lifting Each other's Books.

The CALEB Award:

  • Supports excellence in Australasian Christian books by encouraging and educating writers, regardless of genre.
  • Encourages excellence in Australasian Christian books by recognising and rewarding our best writers across a range of genres.
The CALEB Award will open for entries on 1 April 2023, so if you’re an unpublished Christian writer from Australia or New Zealand, it’s time to polish your manuscript!

The categories for the 2023 CALEB Award are:

  • Unpublished Adult Fiction
  • Unpublished Young Adult Fiction
  • Unpublished Adult Nonfiction
CALEB Award 2023 Call for Judges

In order to run the CALEB Awards, we need judges.

Who can judge?

Anyone! Well, almost anyone.

  • We’re looking for writers and/or keen readers who can read and judge the first fifty pages of between four and ten entries between 1 May and 18 June.
  • This is a contest for Christian writers, so ask that judges agree with the Omega Writers Statement of Faith.
  • Entries are provided as Word files, so you will need to read on your computer, tablet, smartphone, or Kindle device.

All we ask is that you judge each entry fairly, according to the judging criteria.

You can judge any category you haven't entered (so if you enter Adult Fiction, we'd love to have you as a judge for Young Adult Fiction or Nonfiction).

Can I volunteer to judge if I’m entering the CALEB Awards?

Yes! Judging is a great way of giving back to the Australasian Christian writing community.
  • If you’re entering the Nonfiction award but also read fiction, then we’d love to have you judge Young Adult or Adult Fiction.
  • If you're entering a fiction category (Adult or Young Adult Fiction), then we'd love to have you judge Nonfiction or the other fiction category.
  • If you’re not entering the CALEB, then we’d love to have you judge whatever category you like!

What do judges have to do?

First-round judges will have approximately two months to judge between three and ten entries in the category and genre of their choice (so if you hate reading young adult romance, we’ll do our best to ensure you don’t get any romance entries. If you can only judge three entries, we’ll send you three. If you can judge more, we’ll send you more). 

The Unpublished contest is the first 10,000 words of the manuscript, plus a 1,000-word synopsis. Depending on how fast you read, judging should take between 30 and 60 minutes per entry. 

 Those judging the Unpublished contest will be asked to provide written feedback to support their scores, and this feedback will be given to the entrants. 

Feedback is one of the main reasons to enter an Unpublished contest, so we do ask that judges give fair, considered, and prayerful feedback. 

Final-round judges will have approximately two months to pick a winner from three finalists. They will be asked to read the full manuscript (entries are capped at 120,000 words).

Interested? Click here to volunteer!

Thursday, 16 March 2023

Critique Survivor

 

October, 2022: I [Barbara McKay] attended my first Omega Writers Conference at Kingscliffe, NSW as a CALEB finalist. At 78 years of age, I was probably the oldest participant, but with 2 Tim. 1:7 ‘God has not given us a spirit of timidity, or cowardice or fear’ uppermost in my mind, I head-butted my fears.

Nola Passmore from the Toowoomba Chapter of Omega Writers (Quirky Quills) drove me to the resort. I pretended to be intelligent in my conversation. After that weekend, I joined the Toowoomba group.

On the 4th Feb, 2023: came the directive: ‘Bring two pages of writing, double-spaced, for those who will critique your work.’

My children’s story (about 500 words) was about rescuing an injured koala. We broke out into small groups, landing me with fellow Chapter members, Adele and Pamela, who took time to read my story. I felt as if I were in a court of law: The judgement of my writing began—with both written and verbal words.  


In feedback, I received comments such as:

‘Show [do] not tell’ 

‘POV – whose point of view?’  

‘Clearer story progression needed’

‘Use strong verbs’ 

I was in a daze as I walked away and spoke to another new writer to the group, about our ‘Crit Session’. For me, writer’s block set in. For two weeks I contemplated ‘Point of View’ when writing. ‘How do I re-write this story?’ I asked myself.

The 17th Feb (two weeks later): Pamela sent a message on the Writing Messenger thread.

‘How are you going with your story, Barb? I can see the picture you painted with you writing. Look forward to reading it again.’ 

Shock set in as I read her words. I responded. 

‘O dear, Pamela, a writer who is taking me seriously! [I feel like] I’m sitting in the Year 6 classroom listening to the teacher explaining “Point of View”. How do I write from the perspective of an 8-year-old? And you, the teacher, will not let me out of the classroom till I do this task?’

Pamela responded:

‘Oh Barbara. I don’t want to see you give up! [A]bsolutely—you can write from an 8-year-old point of view. It could be fun!’  

She added:

‘I rather think we who have been writing a while have developed a kind of rhino hide. And have forgotten how very hard it is to be in the early days, feeling so vulnerable at sharing your work.  You and Donna are so brave.’

Pamela’s words were the stimulus I needed. ‘I’m not scared of these authors,’ I told myself.

I sent a text asking a question about a suitable thesaurus and ‘Point of View’.

Dear Mazzy, who was on Day 1, Post Surgery, responded from her hospital bed with very encouraging words, and personal exhortation.  

In tears, before tackling the re-working of my koala story, I wrote:

Those Omega writers in Toowoomba … giving us a critique of our work, and then having the audacity /courage to check up on me to see if I have rewritten it. 

Maybe, the Holy Spirit is giving me a gift revealing to me that, ‘Yes, I can write’, but also saying, ‘You can improve, and [those] girls are here to help you.  You go girl!’

Maybe, God is saying [to me and all of us who write], ‘Release your uncomfortable, uneasy thoughts to Me, for I am a God full of compassion and love.  Yes, you are overwhelmed and refuse to write, but hey, people say, “you have a gift”, so keep writing.

Thanks, Omega Writers from Toowoomba.  You are the best!


Barabara McKay is a new student to the classroom of writing (year 6, that is 😉) and determined to leave a written legacy of her life for her family and the generations to come. A minister's wife for forty-one years, she now resides in the peaceful town of Crows Nest, Queensland, writing adventures of the highs and lows of her life and God's faithfulness in every circumstance.

Thursday, 9 March 2023

'Write it Down' by Jo Wanmer

There is no more important time to write than now. Across the world we see God moving in a new way. A few weeks ago, in Asbury, Kentucky, we saw students at a Wesleyan Bible College start to pray and worship 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Why? It seems that one young student had a revelation of his sin and publicly started to repent at the end of a chapel service. Just as John the Baptist’s call to repentance made way for Jesus, so this repentance opened the way for Jesus and He came! Then He came to other universities, schools, communities. He is pouring out his spirit on Generation Z. It’s a revival marked by worship and love of Jesus.

God is up to something big. There are reports of revival from Indonesia, Uganda, Philippians….. and, yes, here in Australia. Every move of God comes with fresh revelation and new understandings of the Word. Such a revelation caused Martin Luther to nail his thesis to the door, regardless of threats against him. New understandings caused the Wesley brothers to be kicked out of churches. They continued to preach in the fields, highways and byways, while writing over 6,500 hymns.
It is imperative for us to write. We must journal as we sit with God and record the ideas he drops into our hearts. Well known bible passages open wider, mean more, go deeper, affecting our hearts. As writers called by God, we have a responsibility to share the new, to find the words to explain what He’s saying. This is why we are wordsmiths. Where would we be today if those called by God didn’t stop and put pen to paper? God said to Habakkuk, "Write down the revelation and make it plain on tablets so heralds may run with it.” (2:2) He spoke similar words to Jeremiah, John, and others.

 On Mt Sinai He used His own finger to write on the stone tablets. God instructed Moses to write. Because of this we have a record of the birth of history. He watches over His Word zealously. During World War II, Warsaw was completely destroyed. Only one wall remained standing vertical. It was part of the building the Bible Society occupied. On the wall was written "Heaven and earth will pass away, but My Word will never pass away."    

He guards His word to the extent that even if it is hidden for centuries, He can bring it to light just as He unearthed the Red Sea Scrolls. Could our words be that important? If we are following Him I believe so.

In the age of the internet, methods of communication have changed. Tic-tok, live stream, zoom and other similar apps have pushed us to verbal and video communication. However, I believe the Lord is still saying, ‘WRITE IT DOWN!’ Maybe one day your grandchild will find an old journal and God will use it to speak to them. Or someone will open and old book you’ve written and find Jesus. Take the revelations God gives you at this time and write booklets. write poems, songs and memes. Insert the ideas in your novels. Let your characters walk out deeper spiritual understandings. 

This week I have heard several people quote Esther 4:14. See picture for the verse, but I’d like to rephrase it for us, for today. 
"If you keep quiet (stop writing) at a time like this, deliverance and relief for our world will arise from some others, but you and your relatives will miss out. Who knows if perhaps you were made a wordsmith for just such a time as this?”

Esther had to risk her life to pass on a message. It was impossible without prayer and fasting, determination, wisdom and self-sacrifice. She could have claimed she was too young, too inexperienced, insignificant. All that was true. But she said yes and God made a way. 

All God is asking us for is a ‘Yes’. A willingness to lay down the old long held precious beliefs and embrace Him as he leads us, his church, into the new. Our agreement and prayer enable him to get the right words on our paper.

 Father, I pray for every son and daughter of yours who read these words today. May your spirit quicken our hearts and minds. I pray you will open the eyes of our hearts and our imagination that each of us will know You and Your power on our writing.

Jo Wanmer is sitting in her chair in North Brisbane. Today she has pushed past the heavy opposition to write, the opposition that comes against us all. Pray for her that she too will write everything He would have her to write.

Her book 'Though the Bud be Bruised' was published ten years ago. There are other stories in anthologies. Other books are waiting for her to jump the publishing hurdle

Monday, 6 March 2023

Highlighting Editing

 by Jeanette O'Hagan





The End! 

Typing these simple two words can give a rush of excitement, the sense of achievement. Like a runner putting their all into the race and feeling the tape break against their chest as they cross the finishing line. Something long planned for, something that has taken up so much time and energy, is now finished. It's surely time to celebrate.  

And indeed it is. You have achieved something that many, many writers never do - finished that book or even finished the story.  Well done.

So now, all you really need to do is send it off to a publisher or upload it to Amazon and your job is done. Right?!

Well, not quite. 

What often distinguishes a great writer from a so-so one is feedback and editing.

Why Edit?


Why Edit? Because both publishers and readers have expectations. 

A well edited manuscript can be the difference between your manuscript catching the eye of an agent or publisher rather than languishing in the reject pile.  In the past, publishers may have accepted a manuscript that needed work, but not any more, not unless you are famous. Publishers are inundated with manuscripts - the slush pile - and have limited time to decide which manuscript is worth investing time and money. 

But what if you self publish? True, you can upload almost anything to Amazon.  But readers can be scathing in reviews or report your book to Amazon for quality issues if they see (or think they see) errors or if the book does not meet their genre expectations.  It's the plethora of unedited or badly edited books that often gives self-publishing a bad name. 

But, you might say, I'm good at English, maybe even an English teacher, I don't need someone else to edit.  Firstly, as writers, we see what we expect to see plus we don't know what we don't know - especially in terms of stylistic and genre expectations which have changed over time. 

Different Levels of Editing

Not all editing is the same. There are different levels of editing. 

Structural or Developmental Edit


Structural or Developmental Edits are like an architectural plan, It looks at the bigger picture, at the basic structure of the book and how it all fits together. 

In a novel, the editor would look at  the story, the plot and how it is narrated and by whom as well as the structure - introduction, inciting incident, turning point, climax etc.  In addition, point of view, the characters, setting, themes, suspense, pacing, foreshadowing, dialogue, consistency, accuracy, and believability will all be scrutinised.

Different genres have different expectations and structure - a romance generally has a HEA (happily ever after conclusion) whereas woman's fiction or chic lit might be unresolved. A murder mystery needs clues, red herrings, a decretive and the big reveal at the end.

Non-fiction also has expected structure and conventions  depending on whether it is a text book, self-help, a memoir or biography or creative non-fiction.




Style or Line Edit


A style or line edit is more like the finishes and furnishings of the house. While a structural edit looks at the manuscript as a whole and often results in a manuscript report - the stylistic or line edit looks at the the manuscript line by line. 

While the editor might pick up inconsistencies of point of view, of the characters, setting and genre etc. they will particularly look word use and sentence structure. For instance, the use of weasel words (filler words or qualifiers that don't add meaning like "that", "very", "almost" etc), use of passive language, or dependence of adverbs and too many adjectives rather than strong verbs and nouns, the repetition of words or use clichés, as well as at the accepted use of dialogue and action tags, the effective use of metaphors and other rhetorical devices. 

A strong, fresh style that reflects the author and is appropriate to the story keeps the readers engaged.

Proofreading

Proof reading is like the quality assurance or final inspection once the building is complete. A proof reader looks for those pesky persistent typos, grammatical and spelling mistakes, punctuation as well as obvious mistakes. 

Better to first get the structure and style right before proofreading sections that might end up on the cutting floor. 

Different Kinds of Editors


Who can you ask to edit? 

Self-Editing


The very first editor - is yourself.  Often it's a good idea to give the book a few weeks rest (to get some distance), then take off your creative writing hat, put on your editor's hat and read through the manuscript yourself as a demanding reader would. 

The more editing you do, the less editing someone else has to do. Plus, it helps you learn and develop your own voice.

Crit-reads


If you are part of a writers group or connected with other writers, particularly in your genre, then getting feedback on each other's work can be helpful (even before your book is finished).  Sometimes, writers of the same genre can swap their finished manuscripts for critical feedback. 



Beta-reads

Beta readers are non-professionals, often fans of your genre or part of your target audience who are prepared to read and give their personal response to your book.  If you can, get a few beta-readers.

Professional editing


In general, before you send your book to a publisher or publish it yourself it's advisable to get professional editing, preferably an editor who knows your genre, is up to date with current trends and knows what they are doing.  

Not sure how to get a professional editors? 

Check out Omega Writers , ask in the group, or make an editor's appointment at the upcoming Omega Writers Retreat (Toowoomba Chapter) in May.

Proof Reader

Once you are happy with the final result, then it's time for  a proof reader. 

Accepting Feedback


Receiving criticism or suggestions can be hard. All six kinds of feedback and three tyes of editing are useful. Hopefully the feedback is constructive - though even brutal criticism (once we get over the shock) can be helpful.

Once you receive the feedback, take a deep breath, listen to what is said and reflect on it, weigh it up, take it seriously. 

That said, you don't have to accept everything that is said. This is still your book and it needs your voice, your vision and your passion.  

One the other hand, if a reader stumbles over a part of your book, then others are likely to do so also.  And if four or five people say the same thing or have the same problem, then it is worth taking note. Still, when readers indicate a problem, once alerted to the fact, you may have a better solution than the ones they suggest. 

Take seriously what a reputable professional editor says.  I find it helps to know the 'why' of recommendations as well as the what. To break the rules effectively, it helps to know them. 



Publishing a book is a triathlon  - but the journey has many rewards along the way (some even material). God bless you in your writing adventures.



Jeanette O'Hagan has spun tales in the world of Nardva from the age of eight. She enjoys writing fantasy, sci-fi, poetry, and editing. Her Nardvan stories span continents, millennia and cultures. Some involve shapeshifters and magic. Others include space stations and cyborgs.


She has published over forty stories and poems, including the Under the Mountain Series (5 books), Ruhanna's Flight and Other Stories, Akrad's Children and Rasel's Song, the first two books in the Akrad's Legacy series - and new short story in the Starlit Realms: Fantasy anthology.

She has been to numerous conference, retreats and events. She doesn't like receiving criticism but knows as a writer that feedback is gold and she is grateful for all the people who have helped her hone her writing along the way.

To get a free copy of Ruhanna's Flight - sign up to Jeanette O'Hagan's newsletter here.