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2009 NaNoWriMo Winner

posted by: ShonBacon

2009 NaNoWriMo Winner

Didn’t think it would happen.

Waited ’til the last minute to even participate and had no real idea what I would write about, but after completing NaNoWriMo the last four years, I just felt the need to do it this year. Would feel like a failure if I didn’t.

The first week was like gangbusters. Wrote a little over 21,000 words that first week. The second week, cleared 30k. The third week, I peter out a bit as school and stress weighed heavily on me. Fourth week, came back and hit that last hurdle and cleared 50k. Total, 50,043 was hit tonight.

Is the story good? Hell, it’s not even a story any more. By week three my interest in the story peter out, so I began jumping into various sections and just writing, so right now, I have a mess, and I probably won’t even go back to it. But it did get me to writing even during the stressful first semester of my doctoral work, so that at least tells me that if I’m more structured I can write something good during this time.

I’m proud of myself. Now, to finish the semester and get into a new project!

Want to hear an excerpt of NaNoWriMo project, Educating Sophia? There’s a new excerpt below! You can check out the first two excerpts at Shon Bacon @ PodBean!

Excerpt Three of Educating Sophia

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Debut Solo Novel ~ Death at the Double Inkwell

posted by: ShonBacon

Death at the Double Inkwell is my debut solo project set to be released in June 2010 by Lady Leo Publishing, but of course, you can head to LLP and PRE-ORDER NOW for 15% off the $6.99 cover price!

Here’s the book descrip:

Sometimes life is stranger than fiction; take the lives of mystery novelists and twins, Jovan Parham-Anderson and Cheyenne Parham. They are young, beautiful, talented, and on their way to their sixth best-selling novel; that is, until Jo learns her husband, Cordell Anderson, founder of Anderson Technologies, is having an affair with Alisha Stewart, his right hand at Anderson. Before she can confront him, tragedy strikes her home, and Jovan must deal with the fact that the careful, safe life she had with Cordell was merely smoke and mirrors.

In the upcoming months leading up to DDIW’s release, I will be showcasing trailers and excerpt podcasts, but for now, take a taste of Death at the Double Inkwell by going to the DDIW link and reading an excerpt!

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Listen to me read from one of my books!

posted by: ShonBacon

From now until December, every podcast of the Once Upon a Time series will showcase the first five to ten pages of a novel I’ve written.

Up FIRST is To Catch a Cheat.

Cheater Investigator Carter Devlin, co-owner of F.A.C.E. (Finding All Cheaters Enterprises) lives by two rules: 1) all cheaters must be exposed and punished, and 2) never, ever fall in love. Playing patsy to her mother’s numerous infidelities as a child helps Carter keep #1 in check. Being assigned to Cheater Number 5302, Kenneth Stevenson, a man with George Clooney looks may lead Carter to break #2.

Carter finds herself falling in heat with Kenneth despite the facts that he’s a possible cheater and his wife, a vocal client during the investigation, happens to look eerily like her. When the investigation leads Carter to believe the wife is the actual cheater, she lets her inhibitions with Kenneth go, only to learn that her best friend and F.A.C.E. co-owner Vince Clark may be in love with her. As she battles her newfound heart over Vince and Kenneth, Carter has to keep one eye on Kenneth’s wife for as the saying goes, hell hath no fury like a woman scorned.

Head to CLG-E’s podcast site now to enjoy a taste of Carter!

CLG Entertainment Podcast Site ~ [LINK]

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Update in a Flash

posted by: ShonBacon

A few months ago, I learned my novel, Death at the Double Inkwell, would be published in 2010 by Lady Leo Publishing.  Today, was asked to submit some material like my bio and dedications and learned that I’ll begin edits in September.

This is my solo debut project, so I am STOKED, :-)

More to come as I get more to share!

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Spreading the Good News

posted by: ShonBacon

In the midst of all the tragedies (RIP Farrah Fawcett and Michael Jackson) and the stumbles and falls that befell me today, I did receive a bright spot.

I learned my screenplay, The Problem with Being Happy, made it through the first round of the PAGE International Screenwriting Competition.

In ‘07, the pilot of a miniseries I wrote, Running from Miss Right, made it through the quarterfinals of this same contest.

I’m hoping to make it this time with HAPPY, but if not, this news is another whisper to my writing spirit that I’m on the right track, and my success is just around the corner.

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Talking about Writing & Editing

posted by: ShonBacon

Today, author/radio host Anjuelle Floyd had me on her show “Book Talk, Creativity & Family Matters” to talk about writing and editing.  Had a GREAT time.  Check out the show by heading to the LISTEN tab!  Leave comments.

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McKee, Cliché, and a Successful Big O

posted by: ShonBacon

Cliché is at the root of audience dissatisfaction, and like a plague spread through ignorance, it now infects all story media.  Too often we close novels or exit theaters bored by an ending that was obvious from the beginning, disgruntled because we’ve seen these clichéd scenes and characters too many times before.  The cause of this worldwide epidemic is simple and clear; the source of all clichés can be traced to one thing and one thing alone:  The writer does not know the world of his story – Robert McKee, STORY

There is something to be said for doing some research and planning of a story, whether it’s as a plotter at the onset of the story or as a pantser who jumps right into a story and then has to backtrack to do some developing of characters, situations, events, etc.

This quote from McKee is an excellent one because in today’s media world of gimme, gimme, gimme–gimme more, gimme now, we find a lot of the same ole, same ole:  the same stories just different character names and locales.  We can nearly predict when an event is going to occur, and we can tell exactly what that event is.  Why is that?

Well, for one, we are a part of the “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” world – if a particular story is hot, then everyone will scramble to write the next best one just like it.  I’m already waiting for the 50-11 Slumdog Millionaires to clog my theatre screen.  In this “if it ain’t broke” world, some writers don’t try to be different; to be different might keep you from riding a trend wave, something I wrote about recently.

Another reason we find ourselves in Clichéville is some new writers (and some not-so-new) don’t take the time to study the craft of writing.  They get an idea for a story and think it’s easy to do and commence to writing; when the writing slows, they find themselves reaching into their mind for any snippet to toss into the story; those snippets often come from other stories.

We all need to realize that every story that can be written has been written.  We need to realize and accept this.  THEN, we need to realize that what makes our story different is our personal spin (due to personality, morals, convictions, likes, dislikes, beliefs, etc.) on that story and how close the story is to us.  We are the creator of the universe we place upon the page.  If we are not intrinsically connected to the world we write about, how do we expect a reader to want to visit the world?

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I finished ScriptFrenzy tonight!  Saying No to the Big O was completed at 101 pages.  I’m geeked.  Feel like I’ve accomplished something – now comes revision!

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McKee, Belief, and the Big O

posted by: ShonBacon

Stanislavski asked his actors:  Are you in love with the art in yourself or yourself in the art?  You too must examine your motives for wanting to write the way you write.  What is your vision?  Each tale you create says to the audience:  “I believe life is like this.”  Every moment must be filled with your passionate conviction or we smell a phony – Robert McKee, STORY

In my time around, within the industry, I have seen so many writers opting to “write what sells.”  They have stories they are passionate about to write, but they see everybody selling in a particular genre and aim themselves to write that book and sell it.  Some sell it…some don’t.

Thing is trends, fads come and go.  A book that’s part of a trend now, in 2009, was probably bought a year, maybe two years ago.  It was hot in 2007, and the trend could be cooling down two years later…  Once everybody and his/her mama starts writing that same type of book, the industry becomes flooded with that genre and may start to back off from buying more…  If a writer is lucky enough (because sometimes publishing isn’t about talent but luck) to get published, his/her work might be likened to SO AND SO (add the top author of a genre) and the many other writers who have not created a unique voice but have simply added yet another book that reads like all the other books in that genre…  Most readers are quite intelligent; they can sense the passion it takes to write a good book, and if your book is just another like others, they will sense it, and it might hinder you from gaining a solid readership for future works.

Being true to your “true” writer self is important.  Yes, for many of us, publication is the platinum ring (I want better than the brass ring.)  However, we should not sell ourselves for it.  When we are true to developing our craft, to researching the industry (not mimicking it but being well-informed), to writing what is truly in our writer spirit to write; the right people will take notice, and literary dreams will come true.

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Update on Saying No to the Big O — I wrote 12 pages today, so I’m up to 87 pages!  4 days – 13 pages to go to make my 100 pages for Script Frenzy.  It’s all gravy now, LOL

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McKee, Mastering Classical Form, and the Big O

posted by: ShonBacon

I sympathize with the youthful desire to make a first screenplay read like PERSONA.  But the dream of joining the avant-garde must wait while, like the artists before you, you too gain mastery of Classical form.  Don’t kid yourself into thinking that you understand Archplot because you’ve seen the movies.  You’ll know you understand it when you can do it.  The writer works at his skills until knowledge shifts from the left side of the brain to the right, until intellectual awareness becomes living craft – Robert McKee, STORY

If you want to know all about classical form and Archplot and the other terminology McKee uses, then you need to buy STORY today.

Essentially, McKee brings up an important point; writers who are serious about their craft need to study it and not take the act of writing nilly willy.

Many people say writing is subjective; for the most part, this is true.  People can love or hate a piece of art based on their personal preferences.  However, I’m one that also believes writing is objective.  There are rules, structure – from the grammar to the mechanics to the style to the…on and on – that instruct writers on the WHAT and the HOW of writing.

There are many writers out there, by the droves, who want to break the mold, to be different than everyone else.

My question is how can you do that if you don’t fully understand what’s out there and how it’s done.

You can watch a million movies, but that doesn’t mean you can write a great screenplay.

You can read a million books, but that doesn’t mean you can write a great book.

Yes, we can debate the successful ones who have gone on and have never had training or never studied the craft or never took writing too seriously, but they are the exception…not the rule.

If you want to be different, then you need to know what the “same” is and understand it so that you can develop your “different” way.

If you want to, for example, write a stream-of-consciousness novel, then you should know how a traditional novel works, understand the nuances of a stream-of-consciousness work, and figure out how you can fit in to that mold.

In the end, serious writers take writing seriously, and if that’s you, it’s time to get to studying so that each work you write is better than the last.

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OH, and my update on Saying No to the Big O:  From last night to today, I’ve written 15 pages; I’m not up to 75 pages.  For ScriptFrenzy, have to write 100 pages by the end of April 30th.  Twenty-five pages in five days.  Can I do it?

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First Attempt at MP3

posted by: ShonBacon

Starting in June, I will have podcasts on my company site, CLG Entertainment; there will be a weekly storytelling podcast and monthly podcasts on literary reviews and writing tips – with more to come probably in the fall.

Been playing around with Audacity and this is actually my SECOND mp3 I made.  It’s titled Chocolate Kisses and features a poem I wrote a million years ago integrated with a mix that my SO (significant other) did; he’s muy talented with original and sampled work.

Check it out, and don’t be too harsh, LOL

FYI – kinda sexy! LOL

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