Subject: Friend, Are You Ready to Clean Up Your Novel's Beautiful Messy First Draft?

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Are You Ready to Clean Up Your Novel's Beautiful Messy First Draft?

December 18, 2015


Hi Friend, 

As we approach the darkest time of the year here in the Northern Hemisphere, you may be thinking of letting go of the old to claim time and make space for the new.

Do you see the new projects, dreams, and desires approaching you, and you approaching them? Or is there too much clutter between you and them? 

Clutter is an internal and external experience. Your house may be messy, papers in piles, books in stacks. Your mind may be full of chatter and your heart clouded with opposing desires.

I love a messy house and I'm always having internal tugs-of-war with myself. I'm not judging at all. I seriously love mess.

I'm a huge proponent of the messy, ebullient process of living as a creative. We are artists after all, us novelists.

What I am noticing is that there comes a time to clean up the beautiful mess, so that you can make space to create a new one. 

I also love cleaning up mess.

Remember when you were a kid and you built a big block tower with delight and concentration, only to give it a good whack, and watch in satisfaction as the whole thing exploded and came crashing down. Then you gleefully built a new crooked tower, where you balanced a round piece on an edge. And destroyed that one too. 

Writing a book is like that, okay, sort of.

Our first drafts are often big, beautiful, chaotic messes. 

Editing is the time when we get to do the delicious task of cleaning up the mess we created.

Just like in your house, where you decide where the cups go -- the hooks and the cupboard -- the shelf and bedside table for the books, and the drawer or shelf for the pair of pants, you get to decide what goes where in your story.

You also get to decide its emotional impact on the reader.

When I start editing, that's the first question I ask myself -- wait, okay the second.

The first question I ask is: What did I create?

And the second is: What do I want it to be? Which relates to the emotional impact I want the book to have on the reader. Which relates to which genre it is. Now we're back to: What kind of book do I want this to be?

Is it a romantic suspense, with its primary focus on the romance, and the secondary on suspense? 

Or the inverse? Is it a suspense novel with romantic elements? In which case, when you edit you want to make sure this book is mostly suspense and secondarily romance.

I am talking about genre. I borrow this definition from Shawn Coyne (The Story Grid, site and book) because it's simple and makes sense to me.

Genre is all about reader expectation.

Shawn's exact quote from his site StoryGrid.com is:

"A Genre is a label that tells the reader/audience what to expect. Genres simply manage audience expectations."

If readers want a happily-ever-after, we call that romance.

If readers what a who-done-it or sometimes a how-done-it, we call that mystery.

If readers want a good vs. evil in space with social commentary about difficult issues of society and humanity, we call that science fiction.

If it's good vs. evil in a made up land with magic, often with themes of power, control, and what does it mean to be a good person, we call that fantasy.

(Of course there are more nuances to genre than I'm stating here, and more genres too!)

If you need help determining what genre is your story, examine its ending. I look at how my novel ends to determine the genre.

My philosophy is that once you know what you've created, and decided what you want it to become (the genre), you can craft a plan of action to edit your book.

A friend recently shared with me how she got lots of feedback on her book, but didn't know how to handle it. Where could she begin? And then what?

Our Edit Your Novel Bootcamp course that starts January 1st and runs through January 31st will address this process.

We've created a roadmap so that you can go from your first draft -- perhaps a beautiful mess -- through a process to a polished draft.

In Week 1, we have you read through your entire book, assessing your strengths, weaknesses, and noticing what your book is. We give you detailed checklists in the areas of story structure, plot, pacing, character, emotional arc, and grammar/word usage, and more, so you can track what's working and what you'd like to see more of. We also have you analyze your genre, so that you can create your "true north" as you go forward into the next stages of editing.

In Week 2, we guide you through a second pass to fix, change, rewrite, tinker with all things related to story structure, plot, and pacing, starting with making sure your scenes are strong. We don't just leave you in the wild to fend for yourself. We have detailed learning modules (video, audio, PDF guides -- all downloadable) at your fingertips so you can get a refresher on "what is a scene?", for example.

In Week 3, we guide you through a third pass, this time focusing on all things character, point of view, emotional depth, and how to crack open the egg of "show, don't tell."

In Week 4, we'll have you focus on grammar, spelling, word choice, and story metaphor, and give you tools to improve your writing in these areas.

This course comes with extensive learning modules, so that you can access specific areas of story craft whenever you'd like.

We also come together in a 4 live weekly webinars (call-in only option available) where you will have the opportunity to have your work critiqued (kindly and in bite-sized pieces). We believe the best way to learn editing concepts and processes is to see them done on your own work.

A lot of people think that using the proper editing methods will make their story great. But actually each person's editing method is different. And the best thing for you to do is to determine your own editing process.

In this class, we give you the structure and process for you to customize and apply to your way of doing things.

If you don't know your way of editing because you have never done it, then this class will give you a chance to experiment, try new things, and discover what does and does not work for you.

"In my one-on-one sessions with Beth, the vigorous review of my manuscript along with the masterful feedback has made me feel like I am in an MFA program. The welcoming and approachable style of both Beth and Ezra Barany leave you heartened and motivated." -- Hugh Tipping, Fantasy Author

If you're ready to register for our January course, go here.

We look forward to having you in the course!

Reminder: We close registration Monday, December 28, 9pm Pacific.



If money is a factor, and you want to join this class, contact me for payment plan options. If this course is right for you, let's make it happen.




 
A few more things going on this month!


December Sale on Courses and Coaching Sessions!

In honor of winter and the holidays in the Northern Hemisphere, I’m offering a 33-50% off on select home-study courses now until tonight, December 18, 2015, 9pm Pacific.

Go here to take advantage of this sale:



Get Feedback on Your Romance Novel: Enter a Contest

If you'd like a chance to get in-depth feedback on your first 15 pages, and are an unpublished romance author, then enter this contest by tonight Friday, December 18th, 9pm Pacific/12midnight Eastern.

All the details here:




Group Coaching Program for Novelists

If you'd like to join us for our 12-month program, we'd love to have you. 

This program is for novelists who have completed or almost completed their novel, and want support to build their author career.

We cover editing, marketing, publishing, and polishing your books. 

Program members get access to a 3+ years worth of trainings, 1-1 calls with Beth every month, and an opportunity for in-depth feedback on your works-in-progress.

You also get the input of two teachers, Ezra and I, during the twice monthly training calls we have where cover your questions on writing, editing, marketing, and publishing.

See if this program is the right investment for you and now's the time:

Every December I offer Early Bird Bonuses as a gift to those people who like to join our group.

Early Bird Bonuses are up!

Sign up by December 31, 2015, you'll get:

 1-2 months extra enrollment in the program that officially restarts February 1, 2016. (Value up to $600)

 The "How to Run a Successful Blog Tour" home study course ($297 value)

— You get the Edit Your Novel Bootcamp for free! ($149 value) (January 2016)

— You get the Branding and Marketing Bootcamp for Novelists for free ($149 value) (April 2016)

These Early Bird Bonuses total up to $1,344. Quite a deal for taking action early!

Check out all we offer for this 12-month group coaching program and to sign up, go here:

Have a Happy and Creative Week!

And thanks for showing up for yourself and doing your creative work!

All our best,
Beth & Ezra

beth@bethbarany.com

PS. If you found this newsletter useful, please forward it to your friends, writing buddies, and people who you know want to write a novel, but gosh darn it, haven't yet.


ABOUT US
Beth and Ezra Barany are award-winning, best-selling novelists, with 18 books and 5 awards to their name. They are teachers who have worked with over 100 authors to help them get their books written and published and into the hands of their readers.

♥ Happily married for over 15 years, we’re passionate about writing, storytelling, and guiding authors to achieve their dreams.

♥ We offer coaching, change work sessions, book marketing coaching (Beth) and cover design (Ezra), all for genre novelists. More at bethbarany.com. 

♥ To explore how Beth can support you, schedule a 1-hour complimentary Discovery Call here: http://bit.ly/AppmtWithBeth.

WHAT I DO + WHY

I support writers and aspiring authors through classes and workshops, articles, books, group programs, and consultations with private clients.

I also help authors because I walk my talk; everything I or my teachers teach is based in real experience and matured through the school of hard knocks.

I believe that the creative life works better with play and love, so with playful joy, I offer you goodies to support you in your writer's adventure.


ABOUT BETH BARANY

An award-winning novelist, certified creativity coach and Master NLP Practitioner, Beth runs Writer's Fun Zone, a blog for and by writers, and her recently launched school for novelists, the Barany School of Fiction.

Beth writes young adult (YA) fantasy and contemporary fantasy romance. She also writes how-to books and courses for novelists, including her home study coaching guide, The Writer's Adventure Guide: 12 Stages to Writing Your Book, a Hero's Journey adaption with you the author as the hero in your own adventure of writing your book.


In her downtime, Beth reads, colors, watches movies with her sweetie, travels, and has coffee with friends and family. And plays with her cat, gardens, and walks. And sleeps. She loves sleep.


Photo Credit: by c. 2014 Vivienne McMaster

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