Categories
A3 Contributor Book Release The Intentional Writer

Three Lessons from Writing My Second Novel

I’m excited to share my new release, Fountains and Secrets, with my Almost an Author family, along with a few things I’ve learned along the way.

The Book

Introducing a new mystery set in the world of the early church. Fountains and Secrets is the second book in the Livia Aemilia Mystery series. Like the first book in the series, Fountains and Secrets features a spunky female sleuth and her sassy sidekick, who aren’t afraid to be a little unconventional in pursuit of the truth. They are aided in their investigative endeavors by a motley collection of friends, servants, and a couple of strays (human and feline).  

For readers who enjoy mysteries and historical fiction with a touch of humor, Fountains and Secrets is quirky, clever, and engaging tale of identity, purpose, and hope.

Fountains and Secrets by Lisa E. Betz

And what have I learned about writing and promoting as I’ve worked through bringing two books to print? There are too many lessons to share in one post, but here are three I hope will encourage you as you continue on your author journey.

Writing a series isn’t as easy as I thought

In the mystery genre, series are normal, so I had planned from the beginning on writing a series of Livia Aemilia books. I was expecting the second book to be easier, since I already knew the main characters and had a feel for the tone and setting.

It didn’t turn out that way.

Working on the first book, my heroine’s voice seemed to come naturally, so I assumed it would come as naturally in the next one. Nope. It took me several false starts before I dialed in the right tone for Fountains and Secrets.

I thought that after having written one mystery, plotting the second one would be easier. Maybe. I think I had a better idea of what would make a good mystery story, but actually plotting the book proved just as challenging as my first attempt. Apparently, I still have a lot to learn about creating a plot from scratch, which means I must do a lot of rewriting along the way to until I get a plot into shape.

Despite these challenges, I persevered. With the help of good feedback, my characters came to life again and the plot eventually fell into place.  

I hope my experience will encourage any of you who are struggling with your next writing project. Book two wasn’t as easy to write as I’d hoped, but early feedback says it’s a better story than the first book.

And that tells me the work was worth it.  

Generosity and networking are important.

As in most of life, you reap what you sow. At some point you will need to have kindhearted authors who are willing to support you in a promoting your book in some way. How do you find these magical people?

First of all, you need to meet them and interact with them. This could be a face-to-face conversation at a writers conference, or it could be a relationship built over time while corresponding online through a writer’s group or through writing for blogs like Almost an Author.

Next, you have to be generous in promoting and supporting other writers. When you do willingly promote others with no strings attached, you are advancing God’s kingdom by helping get truth out into the world.

And you are also sowing goodwill, which you can reap late when you need help. For more thoughts on how you can be a generous writer, read this post.

Writing contests can be a good investment

Opinions differ on the value of entering your work in writing contests. Some experts say that it’s a waste of time to enter your book in any but the most prestigious contests.

I disagree.

I admit that becoming a finalist in a writing contest hasn’t made a significant impact in book sales, BUT (and this is a big but) it has made a significant impact on my author journey. Among other things, placing in writing contests boosts your resume, may snag the attention of an agent or publisher, and is noteworthy news that can be used in press releases and social media.

In addition to the practical reasons, being named a finalist in a contest, no matter how small, can make a difference in the tender heart of a writer. Winning an award in a small writers’ conference is worth something to our creative souls, regardless of whether it ever shows up on a resume or in ad copy.

Now for my experience with contests. I entered several manuscripts over the years in the ACFW First Impressions and Genesis contests. Each gave me valuable feedback on the manuscripts. On my third attempt, I was thrilled to become a finalist in the Genesis contest (mystery category). Shortly after that, I was offered a publishing contract for the manuscript, which became my first novel, Death and a Crocodile.

At my publisher’s suggestion, I entered the book in several contests, and was named a finalist in several of them. I cannot tell you how much it means to a beginning, completely unknown author, to be able to say that my book won an award. It was a validation of both the book and of me, and if gave me a much-needed boost of confidence to promote my book to bookstore owners and others.

Finally, it feels really good to be able to write “award-winning author” and “award-winning book”!

For advice on choosing and winning writing contests, I suggest you check out this Serious Writer Academy class.

Lisa E Betz

An engineer-turned-mystery-writer, Lisa E. Betz infuses her novels with authentic characters who thrive on solving tricky problems. Her debut novel, Death and a Crocodile, won several awards, including Golden Scroll Novel of the Year (2021). Her second novel, Fountains and Secrets released January 2022, from Redemption Press.

Lisa combines her love of research with her quirky imagination to bring the world of the early church to life. She and her husband reside outside Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, with Scallywag, their rambunctious cat—the inspiration for Nemesis, resident mischief maker in the Livia Aemilia Mysteries. Lisa sorts book donations at the library, directs church dramas, eats too much chocolate, and experiments with ancient Roman recipes.

In addition to writing novels, Lisa blogs about living with authenticity and purpose. Visit her website: Quietly Unconventional. Or visit her social media: Facebook , Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest, Goodreads.

Categories
The Binge Writer

Writing Contests – Winning Can’t Be Duplicated

 

When it comes to entering writing contests, it’s important to remember that winning can’t be duplicated.

Many children’s sports leagues contain participation awards. Writing is very different form children’s sports. Publishers and agents aren’t looking for authors who have received participation awards. They are looking for authors who can write well enough to sell books.

Contests often help speed up an agents or publishers search process. They help separate the wheat from the chaff. Award recognition is a healthy sign of writing ability.

If you aren’t entering writing contests, you need to be. Contests help your writing career is various ways.

  1. Contests require you to meet deadlines
    1. Any writer, worth their salt, is capable of meeting a publisher or agents deadline. Contest deadlines push you to write well in a tight timeframe.
  2. Contests build your writing resume/bio
    1. Winning awards helps you pad your writing resume or bio. This is essential early in your writing career, as most beginning writers don’t have a lot of published work to include in their author bio.
  3. Contests help you find an agent/publisher
    1. Many agents and publishers serve as judges in contests. It gives them opportunities to discover new talent, find new clients, and see how your work stacks up against similar competition.
  4. Contests stretch your writing ability
    1. Competition drives us to improve. When you know your work will be judged against others, you strive to create your best manuscript, applying learned skills and strengthening your writing.
  5. Contests allow you to gain perspective
    1. Sometimes we need a reality check. You may think your manuscript is amazing, but in reality it needs some work. Many contest offer constructive feedback, which can give you critical insight into improving your writing.
  6. Contests encourage you to step outside the box
    1. Entering contests in various genres and writing styles helps you become a more well rounded writer. You may not be the best novelist, or best poet, but entering in various contests encourages you to grow as a writer, which can improve all of your writing.
  7. Contests help you get published
    1. Many contests offer publishing opportunities to winners and/or finalists. If you enter these contests and win, you may also find yourself become published in a magazine or anthology. Or better yet, you may land that all important book contract.

Writing contests are an important and necessary part of the writing lifestyle. Take time to search for contests that have deadlines within the next few months and begin writing and editing. Don’t wait for your writing to be perfect before you enter. No writer’s ever is.

Good luck, and I hope you win!

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Categories
The Blue Seal Awards

Blue Seal Awards – Writing Contest (Open for entries July 1st 2016)

Almost An Author (A3) is excited to announce its writing contest. The Blue Seal Awards for Internet Writing Excellence.

We are offering 2 contests:

1) Blogs

2) Internet Articles

About the Award:

The Blue Seal Award recognizes excellent internet-based writing. As one of the most popular forms of writing, Almost An Author desires to recognize important and powerful writing crafted by new and/or aspiring authors.

How To Enter:

To enter, please send:

1) A one-page cover letter with your blogs’s title, your name, and the focus/purpose of your blog.

3) A link to your blog and/or your article as an attachment.

4) If you have a Facebook and/or Twitter account “like” or “follow” Almost An Author’s accounts.

  1. https://www.facebook.com/AlmostAnAuthor
  2. www.twitter.com/a3forme

5) Send your entry to editor@almostanauthor.com with “Blue Seal Award – Blog” or  “Blue Seal Award – Article” in the subject line by September 1, 2016.

6) Pay your contest fee of $10/entry. Paypal button is located at the end of this post for your convenience.

All entries will be subscribed to our newsletter/subscriber lists, but you may unsubscribe at any time.

Any questions? Ask Editor at editor@almostanauthor.com

The Blue Seal Award for Blogs

Th Blue Seal Award for Blogs is given to a blogger that shows excellence in content and has a fresh and unique perspective on their chosen topic(s).

Rules and Guidelines:

  1. Any writer who has a blog that contains new content at least twice a month.
  2. Please submit your entry to editor@almostanauthor.com
  3. All entries must be accompanied by a one-page cover letter explaining the focus and purpose of your blog.
  4. Please include a link to your blog in your entry email, and also in your cover letter.
  5. Entries must be received by September 1, 2016.
  6. Finalists and Winners will be announced by October 1, 2016.
  7. Winners will be announced by October 1, 2016.
  8. Top entries will receive the Blue Seal Award for Blogs.
    1. Award will come as a .png/.jpeg wax seal which you may display on your blog.
    2. Finalists will be given the opportunity to become a regular contributor at www.almostanauthor.com

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The Blue Seal Award for Web Articles

Th Blue Seal Award for Web Articles is given to a writer that shows excellence in content and has a fresh and unique perspective on their chosen topic(s).

Rules and Guidelines:

  1. Any writer who has written a blog or web article.
  2. Entry articles can be any length, but 300-600 words is preferred.
  3. Please submit your entry to editor@almostanauthor.com
  4. All entries must be accompanied by a one-page cover letter.
  5. Entries must be submitted as an email attachment.
  6. If you have a blog, please include a link to it in your entry email, and also in your cover letter.
  7. Entries must be received by September 1, 2016.
  8. Finalists and Winners will be announced by October 1, 2016.
  9. Top entries will receive the Blue Seal Award for Web Article Writing.
    1. Award will come as a .png/.jpeg wax seal which you may display on your blog.
    2. Finalists will be given the opportunity to become a regular contributor at www.almostanauthor.com
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Blue Seal Awards Entries

Email your submission(s) to editor@almostanauthor.com and pay your contest fee online below.


Number of Entries
Please list your entries:



Categories
Romancing Your Story

CONTEST OR NOT TO CONTEST? PART ONE

If you read my last column, you’ll know we determined that most fictional stories contain some element of romance. That is very fundamental as I talk to you about contests. There is quite a bit of debate in the writing world as to whether entering a contest is worth the money, time, and possible rejection of your work. I will state right up front that I believe they are worth your time and effort, published or non-published.

 

NOTE: Coming from a purely romantic and fictional world, I can only speak on fictional contests. I don’t write non-fiction nor do I have a blog, both of which I believe do have contests available. I cannot help you with the logistics of them, though I hope the end results are the same.

 

This month I would like to share personal and positive experiences I myself have had with contests, solely to show you why I believe in them.

 

In 1995, I wrote my first book, a Regency, and though it was perfectly acceptable to me as I was writing it for my own entertainment, family and friends urged me to seek out publishing. (That is when you really seek out people who will read your work and tell you the absolute truth about it!) Quite by accident I discovered a very small writing contest by a very small group of writers in my genre. The only reason I entered was that the winning entry would be given the opportunity to send the full manuscript to a very iconic editor of a very large publishing company.

 

Do you think I am going to say I won it? I did not. But at that time in my “career” I got what I needed most – feedback. Each judge had used the same standards for every entry they received. I got their copies of the scoring sheets, with comments, encouragement, suggestions, and problems – galore! Oh, there were many more problems than encouragement but the suggestions made me look at the story a whole new way. And the negative comments made me look even harder.

 

(This lovely little contest is also where I got the best advice I have ever received in critique; shall I tell you? READ WHAT YOU’VE WRITTEN OUT LOUD TO YOURSELF BEFORE YOU EVER SEND IT ANYWHERE! My dear friends, if you don’t do this, start. I’m talking cover to cover if it is ten pages or 300. You will “hear” when words sound out of order, when there is not enough or too much emotion, when the same word is used twice in the same sentence; I could go on and on, and this is really more for next week’s article. I just had to share to show you one of the advantages of contests!)

 

We left off with my poor little manuscript and me deciding whether to put it out of its misery or keep it. I kept it. Flash forward to 2004. My husband found my box of manuscripts (from 20 years ago) and I rewrote that sad little story using twenty years of life experience I did not have the first time and using several of the comments from that little contest. Then I went out into the publishing world to see if I fit.

 

That book, my debut, was not only published, but won the 2011 Romantic Times Reader’s Choice award and the Holt Medallion award for Best Book by a Virginia Author!

 

Was it all because of the contest so long ago? Of course, not. It was an answer to my prayer, wondering what in the world I was doing. It was being led by God to a wonderful, supportive agent (who BTW also sent it out to five random readers as a beta group who sent me an additional 5 sets of critiques!) And ultimately, it was God’s perfect timing with an editor who wanted the story.

 

Please, please do not think I am bragging. You have no idea how many “thanks, but no thanks” we heard or “can the author say it in 70,000 words as opposed to the 100,000 words submitted?” Or a million other walls we hit first. My point is that if I hadn’t submitted that original unpublished manuscript to that little contest, I would never have received all of the feedback, which I still use today. And if I hadn’t entered the published book into the ten or so contests I had learned about, I would have lost out on the opportunity to put “Award Winning Author” after my name – forever! (Can anyone say PERK?)

 

But you know what I also received, almost equally as valuable? The scoring sheets on the eight contests I didn’t win. And do you know what I’ve done with those? I used them in writing my second and third books, and, hopefully, in books to come.

 

I’d love to hear about your contest experience! Let me know below and we can talk about them. Be sure to tune in next month when I will go over the logistics, and costs, as well as where you can find contests that might be just the one for you.

Categories
Contests Fresh Voices Writing Contest

Fresh Voices Writing Contest – Open for Submissions (Opens for Entries Oct. 1st 2016)

FRESH VOICES WRITING CONTEST

[box type=”shadow” align=”” class=”” width=””]UPDATE: 10/27/15 – Lighthouse Publishing of the Carolinas has committed to read a full proposal and a three chapter sample of the contest of some winners in novel and book length nonfiction! [/box]

[box type=”shadow” align=”” class=”” width=””]UPDATE: 10/4/15 – WhiteFire Publishing has committed to read a full proposal and a three chapter sample of the contest winners in novel and book length nonfiction! [/box]

[box type=”shadow” align=”” class=”” width=””]UPDATE: 10/5/15 – A3 Publishers has committed to include top short story and flash fiction submissions in a 2016 anthology![/box]

Almost An Author (A3) is excited to announce The Fresh Voices Writing Contest

We are offering multiple contests across every genre in Fiction, Non-Fiction, Children’s, and Poetry.

Contest open for submission on Oct. 1st, 2015.

Contest submission deadline Dec. 31st, 2015.

About the Award:

The Certified Fresh Voice Award recognizes excellent writing in each genre. Almost An Author desires to recognize important and powerful writing crafted by new and/or aspiring authors.

How To Enter:

To enter, please:

1) Attach your submission here or below in .doc/.docx or .pdf file types
submit

2) If you have a Facebook and/or Twitter account “like” or “follow” Almost An Author’s accounts.

  1. https://www.facebook.com/AlmostAnAuthor
  2. www.twitter.com/a3forme

3) Please submit your entry through the submission button located at the bottom of the page. You may also may your check and entry. (Information located below)

4) Format entries in 12pt font, double spaced, proper manuscript formatting. Exceptions, picture books and poetry.

5) Entries must be received by December 31st, 2015.

6) Finalists and Winners will be announced by February 1st, 2016.

7) Winners will be announced by February 15th, 2016.

8) All entries will be subscribed to our newsletter/subscriber lists, but you may unsubscribe at any time.

9) Any questions? Ask Editor at editor@almostanauthor.com

Fresh Voices Contest 

Prizes

Top entries will receive the Certified Fresh Voices Awards. Gold for 1st, Silver for 2nd, and Bronze for 3rd.

  1. Award will come as a .png/.jpeg medal which you may display on your blog, book cover, etc.
  2. Finalists will be given the opportunity to become a regular contributor at www.almostanauthor.com
  3. Select winners will be offered an opportunity to be included in the next volume of A3’s Devote book.
  4. Overall Winners will receive a A3 t-shirt.

Contest Categories:

IMPORTANT – READ FIRST: Contest categories are in bold. Sub-categories contests will be initiated, if a large number of entries are received in a category. For example, if we receive 50 Novel entries, we will subdivide the contest into the subcategories. Once a contest is subdivided, there will be an overall winner and finalist for the main category, and a winner and finalists for the subcategory. Please list BOTH your category and sub-category for each of your entries. You may list more than one subcategory for your entry, if you choose to do so, we will determine which category to place your entry in.

You may enter the same category multiple times, but only your highest scoring entry will qualify for a chance to win an award. You may also enter a piece in multiple categories, but each one requires an additional entry fee.

UPDATE (12/02/15) – Non-award winning previously published works are welcome.

  • Inspirational – Submit entire work
    • Devotion
    • Bible Study
  • Non-fiction – Submit first three chapters.
    • Self-Help
    • Parenting
    • Business/Leadership
    • Religion
    • Other
  • Memoirs/Personal Essay – Submit first three chapters and synopsis.
  • Magazine Feature Article – under 1,500 words –  Submit entire work
  • Flash Fiction – under 1,000 words – – Submit entire work
    • Under 500 words
    • Under 1000 words
  • Short Story – 1,000-5,000 words – Submit entire work
    • Romance
    • Fantasy
    • Science Fiction
    • Suspense/Thriller
    • Mystery/Detective/Crime
    • Western/Historical
    • Inspiration
  • Novel – 45,000-100,000+ words – Submit first three chapters.
    • Romance
    • Fantasy
    • Science Fiction
    • Suspense/Thriller
    • Mystery/Detective/Crime
    • Western/Historical
    • Inspiration
  • Novella – 15,000-45,000 words – Submit first three chapters.
  • Poetry – No more than 32 lines. Three poems is one entry.
    • Non-rhyming Poetry
    • Rhyming Poetry
  • Scripts – Submit entire work
    • Television
    • Movie
    • Stage Play
  • Children’s and Youth – Submit entire work
    • Picture Books
    • Easy Readers
    • YA Fiction
    • YA Non-fiction
    • Middle Grade
    • Chapter Books
  • Self-Published Books – Submit entire work
    • Novel
    • Non-fiction
    • Children’s Book

Mailed Entries:

  • Enter online or submit your entry via regular mail. If you are mailing your entry, please include a check with the $10 entry fee for each entry. You can mail entires to 1731 E. Main St. Springfield, OH 45505. Checks made out to Almost An Author. Please do not send cash.
  •  If you are entering more than one manuscript, you may mail all entries in the same envelope and write one check for the total entry fee; however, each manuscript must have its category indicated in the upper left-hand corner. You may enter online even if you are paying with a check. All checks will be cashed within 60 days of the competition final deadline. Entry fees are non-refundable.
  • BE SURE OF YOUR WORD COUNT! Entries exceeding the word or page limits will be disqualified. Type the exact word count (counting every single word, except the title and contact information) at the top of the manuscript.
  • Mailed entries that are more than one page in length must be stapled.

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Fresh Voices Contest Entries


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