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Magazine, Freelance, and Copywriting

Uprooting Your Writing Life: Tips for Moving Your Home Library

As a writer, your prized possession is almost certainly your collection of books. Whether you read reams of epic fantasy or are a sucker for a good literary romance, your books are an important part of your world and have helped you become the author that you are today.

That means that moving time can be stressful. Not only will your family try to cut down on the volume of books you’re planning to move with, but you’ll need to properly transport your library with care if you want them to make the journey in one piece.

That said, moving to a new home also represents an opportunity to improve your home library. You’re working with a blank canvas, and have plenty of options to redesign your reading space to keep your favorite books close at hand. You can also redecorate with reading in mind and may be able to create an even cozier space to sit down and read in peace and quiet.

Caring for Your Collection

If reading plays a central role in your life, you may be worried about the damage that could occur when moving. This is a valid concern; particularly if you have rare or sentimentally important books in your collection. Rather than simply stuffing your books into boxes, follow guidance on how to successfully move your collection, which suggests:

  • Cleaning your books to remove dust, mold, or liquid damage
  • Prepare them by sorting them in the order that you plan to unpack them
  • Take extra care with antiques, wrapping each individual book with acid-free cloth and bubble-wrap
  • Label each box properly, so you can find your hardcover fiction and collection of memoirs quickly when you arrive at your new home

Following these steps can help you master the art of crating and shipping during your move and protect your books. Securing proper crating is crucial if you’re transporting a large volume of books and do not want them to get damaged in transit. Nowadays, you can even buy customizable padding and support to ensure that the crates you choose fit your needs exactly. Just be sure to inspect the crates yourself, lest any of your favored books have been accidentally packaged in the wrong packaging.

Creating a Reading Space

Packing up your library can be a little tedious. However, once you’ve got your books in boxes, the fun can begin. Start by creating a blueprint of your new library space and pull tape to get an accurate estimation of where you’ll be able to store your books.

Rather than choosing bookshelves and cabinets at random, consider making an investment in a more permanent solution like bespoke shelving. This will cost a little more, but bespoke, fitted shelving will turn a disorganized writing room into a distinct home library. Fitted shelves will also help you fit as many books as possible into your new space, meaning your passion for reading and writing can flourish following your move.

If this is your first dedicated home library, consider drawing inspiration from writers who have created the perfect writing and reading room. This means you’ll want to include features like:

  • Soundproofing the room
  • Investing in natural lighting
  • Comfortable seating throughout
  • Closeness to nature (indoor plants or great views)

You’ll also want to design a room that supports your needs. Before buying a drinks trolley or an espresso machine for your library, ask yourself what you plan on doing while in your new space. Do you plan to work on professional projects while in the library, or is it primarily a space where you plan to get lost in a good book?

This is a question explored by Virginia Woolf, in her 1916 essay “Hours in a Library”, where she draws a distinction between “learners” and “readers”. While the distinction may be a little reductive, answering purpose-driven questions can boost your writerly productivity and help you settle down to enjoy a new book when you’re finished writing for the day.

Getting Rid of Items

While every book is sacred, every reader has a few volumes that are not highly regarded. Getting rid of these books when moving is crucial. They’ll free up space for your most prized novels and will alleviate the sense of despair you feel when you look at your DNF or “to read” pile.

Try to donate items when cleaning out books before a big move by getting in touch with charitable organizations like:

  • Salvation Army
  • Once Upon a Child
  • Goodwill
  • Books for Soldiers
  • Operation Give

These organizations are in need of books and will ensure that your unwanted volumes find a good home. This can appease your family members, too, who will appreciate lightening the load by shipping books off to good causes before a move.

Conclusion

Moving your home library can be anxiety-inducing if you’ve collected a large collection of rare volumes and prized editions. However, with a careful approach, you can move your books into the new home safely and may benefit from an uptick in comfort and productivity when you’ve finished moving house. Just be sure to design your reading space with your needs in mind, as you’ll need to establish a clear distinction between work and leisure if you want your new library to feel like a home within your home.

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A Lighter Look at the Writer's Life

Writers Up!

I always have the first Saturday in May marked on my calendar. Even though I have never been in person, this Tennessee girl loves to watch the Kentucky Derby. They make a day of what has become known as the fastest two minutes of sports.

I enjoy the back stories of the owners, trainers and horses. I love seeing all the high fashion of rich and famous and those who pretend to be for a day. Of course, the most fashionable of all are hats and fascinators. For us country folk, a fascinator is a small hat or a piece of hat that is worn to one side of the head.

The Derby is steeped in tradition such as singing, “My Old Kentucky Home” and the Bugler playing the “Call to Post.” It has many others too numerous to mention. While all of these fashions and traditions are wonderful fun, they really don’t affect the outcome of the race. However, there is one tradition that does and that is the command of “Riders Up.” The call tells the jockey to mount his horse for the race. The jockey is the driving and guiding force of the race.

Writing is a lot like a horse race. Grab the reins and hold on, I’m going somewhere with this. While we don’t want to think about racing against other writers the truth is if your article is not in that magazine somebody else’s will be. If your book is not on the shelf, the customer will buy someone else’s book.

The writer’s race is much more. We race against deadlines and sometimes we win by a fraction of the nose like this year’s Derby winner did. We race against other things such as housework, jobs, family and social schedules. Many times, we leave our writing to wander around the paddock with no guiding force.

Jockeys are trained and they have honed their craft so to speak. They spend time learning how to use the tools of their trade, strategizing the logistics of the race and being in the right mindset to race. However, none of the hard work of the jockeys would matter if they never got on the horse.

Do you know how you can tell if you have honed your writing craft? Go back and look at some of your early writings, if you cringe at how bad they are that probably means you have been honing. Go to conferences, network, follow other writers on social media. All of this is important, but it matters little if you never get on the horse.

The experienced jockeys win races, but every jockey had to have their first win. The old saying still rings true, “Writers write.”  So, it’s time to get on the horse and get your writing to the gate. To that I say, “Writers up!”

Sue Davis Potts is a freelance writer from Huntingdon, Tennessee. She is mother to her beautiful adult daughter, Jessa. Sue enjoys writing for both children and adults. She worked for years as a preschool teacher but feels most at home these days with other writers who speak her language. She has been published in local magazines, anthologies, Ideals, Southern Writer’s Magazine and Focus on the Family’s children’s magazines Clubhouse and Clubhouse, Jr.

She authored a children’s library book.  She is the author of a book of short motivations 101 Life Lessons From Uno (The One-Legged Duck) and coauthored. The Priceless Life (The Diane Price Story). Both books are available on Amazon. Sue can be found on her website, www.suedavispotts.com.

Carlton Hughes, represented by Cyle Young of Hartline Literary, wears many hats. By day, he is a professor of communication. On Wednesday evenings and Sunday mornings, he serves as a children’s pastor. In his “spare time,” he is a freelance writer. Carlton is an empty-nesting dad and devoted husband who likes long walks on the beach, old sitcoms, and chocolate—all the chocolate. His work has been featured in Chicken Soup for the Soul: The Dating Game, The Wonders of Nature, Let the Earth Rejoice, Just Breathe, So God Made a Dog, and Everyday Grace for Men. His latest book is Adventures in Fatherhood, co-authored with Holland Webb.

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Writing with a Disability (Different Ability)

Challenges!

Earlier this month I faced the daunting challenge of driving home from a whirlwind five-day writer’s conference. Although I was excited about the connections I made and the new information I learned, I was exhausted from getting less sleep than I normally do.

I cannot over emphasize how important it is for persons with disabilities to rest. The lack of sleep was having an impact on my brain..  My eyes wouldn’t focus.  My left hand felt number.  I couldn’t think clearly.

Times like these can be pretty scary for persons with disabilities, even when the person seems normal, they are facing numerous internal challenges nobody ever knows about except for them.

I knew that I needed to get off of the highway before something bad happened, so I pulled into the parking lot of a dealership outside of Asheville North Carolina. After that brief pause, I was able to get back on the highway and continue on home. Sometimes, we have to hit Pause when we began to face challenges.

Below are a few common benefits of taking breaks from Psychology Today.

  • Movement breaks are essential for your physical and emotional health.
  • Breaks can prevent “ decision fatigue.
  • Breaks restore motivation, especially for long-term goals.
  • Breaks increase productivity and creativity.
  • Waking ”rest” helps consolidate memories and improve learning.

Medical science shows that taking breaks helps us better handle the challenges of everyday life;  perhaps, more so for the challenge of the writing life.

 Challenges

You don’t have to be disabled to face challenges in life, they are a part of life. The pandemic has taken challenges in life to a whole new level. Life is pretty stressful for all of us these days thanks to the challenges of our new normal.

Listed below, according to the International Psychology Clinic, are the ten  most common problems we face in life:

  1. Health Crisis
  2. Workplace issues
  3. Emptiness
  4. Friendship issues
  5. Failure
  6. Financial crisis
  7. Career pressure
  8. Unfair treatment
  9. Inner peace
  10. Mental health issues

The writing life comes with its unique challenges: learning the craft, creating ideas, building a platform, finding agents or publishers, and marketing/promoting your publications.

Rest assured, no matter how good your book is, you will face challenges at some point in your writing journey. This is why the best writers are prepared for it.

Preparation

Preparation is a big part of being successful. Most of us want to skip the challenging phase and go straight to life on the mountain top, but we’d miss the most important parts of the journey of life.

We fail to build our life muscles when we shortcut the journey. We also fail to find a support group when we’re struggling. After my accident, I foolishly thought I was able to do everything I once could before I sustained my brain injury. I didn’t want to do the work to get back to where I used to be. And I only encountered more hardship because of my desire to succeed.

The first step in any recovery process, whether physical, mental or substance is to first admit you have a problem and need help. We don’t have to face these challenges alone and we definitely don’t need to avoid them.

After my accident, I had to see a neuropsychologist to help me deal with the psychological aspect of living with a traumatic brain injury. Once I was out of the hospital, I began going to support groups for alcoholics, these are the places where I got the support I needed to navigate the challenges I faced in life at the time.

Traumatic brain injury survivors must go through a series of rigorous tests that challenge them before they can start a rehabilitation routine. It’s imperative to learn what challenges they have to live with and how to handle them. Years later, I still have to take specific tests with my annual exam to determine where I’m at in my recovery.

The areas tested include:

  • Cognitive
  • Physical
  • Visual
  • Emotional

I learned from author Jerry B. Jenkins that no writer starts at the top in their writing journey. Before they can ever write a book, they need to start out with smaller tasks to get stronger in the craft.

“Don’t try to become a writer until you’ve: studied the craft, written things smaller than a book, joined a community of writers, start building your platform.”

Jerry B. Jenkins

These are the steps writers must take to get stronger and be prepared for the challenges ahead!

Martin Johnson

Martin Johnson survived a severe car accident with a (T.B.I.) Traumatic brain injury which left him legally blind and partially paralyzed on the left side. He is an award-winning Christian screenwriter who has recently finished his first Christian nonfiction book. Martin has spent the last nine years volunteering as an ambassador and promoter for Promise Keepers ministries. While speaking to local men’s ministries he shares his testimony. He explains The Jesus Paradigm and how following Jesus changes what matters most in our lives. Martin lives in a Georgia and connects with readers at MartinThomasJonhson.com  and on Twitter at mtjohnson51.

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WARFARE! Write for His Glory

One Body, Many Parts by Mary G. Scro

Can you imagine what life would be like if you had 4 eyes but no nose or mouth? Or two hearts but no lungs?

Right, you’d not be able to survive.

That describes my writer’s journey. My passion is to write and speak – to share what God shows me. But hey, I can figure out all this other stuff, and “do it myself” so that it’s exactly what I want.

Categories
History in the Making

Historical Writing Requires Attention to Details

By Sandra Merville Hart

When it comes to research, contemporary writers have it so easy, right? I am teasing, because these novelists definitely research their topics. However, it is true that everyday objects don’t have to be described in great detail in those genres.

For instance, when a character answers a phone in a contemporary novel, writers don’t have to mention that they hold the object to their ear to hear the conversation. The ringtone isn’t described unless it says something about the character’s personality or holds meaning in the story.

On the other hand, historical writers pay attention to those details as they paint a picture from days gone by. For example, novelists add descriptions of landaus, a four-wheeled carriage, for readers who want to see the vehicle in their imagination. These carriages contained two seats that faced each other to accommodate four adults comfortably. The driver sat on an elevated seat while guiding a team of four horses.

Landaus are no longer common so writers realize the need to describe these modes of transportation. Many objects fall into this category and enhance reader’s pleasure to learn a bit about the past.

However, there are other familiar objects that we, as writers, simply assume have been around for generations. I discovered this while writing a novel set in 1877.[bctt tweet=”Historical novelists can’t trust assumptions. Verify with research. #histfic #writer ” username=”@Sandra_M_Hart”]

My character sat on a front porch swing enjoying a conversation with her niece and new stepdaughter. The scene almost wrote itself. It didn’t occur to me until editing to wonder when porch swings came into use. I swung on them during childhood visits to older relatives’ homes, making me assume that they had been gracing front porches for years.

Assumptions have to be verified, requiring additional research.

In another novel, I wanted to show a character’s brothers playing tricks on her for April Fool’s Day. When did such shenanigans begin? Research showed this tradition began in 1700, making it safe to include in my 1904 novel.

How about the celebration of Mother’s Day and Father’s Day? These are relatively new holidays honoring parents.

I wanted to include a scene where fourteen-year-old twins (not yet called teenagers in 1877) decorated a Christmas tree at their boarding house with ribbons. They strung popcorn to arrange across the evergreen branches. Including these activities in my story required researching when Americans began to chop down evergreen trees to bring into their homes for Christmas. Did they decorate with ribbons, hang presents on the tree, pop corn for the occasion? These nostalgic details, once verified, bring richness to stories.

A wonderful aspect of research is that it often reveals traditions that are no longer followed. Including long-forgotten details deepens both your story and your reader’s delight.

We are often fairly certain of our facts, such as the date an event took place, but it’s always worth checking if there is any doubt. An abundance of Internet sites often makes this a quick process.

 

Sources

“April Fools Tradition Popularized,” History.com, 2017/02/24 http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/april-fools-tradition-popularized.

“Landau,” Encyclopeadia Brittanica, Inc., 2017/02/24 https://www.britannica.com/technology/landau-carriage.

 

 

 

 

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History in the Making

Seeing His Words in Print Baffles Mark Twain

by Sandra Merville Hart

Mark Twain’s life was at a pivotal moment in the 1860s.

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He was out of the States and in Nevada Territory where fortunes were made and lost while mining for silver. He ought to know; his part-ownership in a silver mine had made him a millionaire. Through the worst of misfortunes, Twain lost his interest in the mine after ten days.

What was next for him? He had held a variety of positions: grocery clerk, blacksmithing, bookseller’s clerk, drug store clerk, St. Louis and New Orleans pilot, a printer, private secretary, and silver mill miner. He felt that he had mastered none of these professions. What does one do after losing a million dollars?

[bctt tweet=”Mark Twain was at a pivotal moment. What does one do after losing a million dollars? #writing #inspiration” username=”@Sandra_M_Hart”]

He gave in to misery. He had written letters to Virginia’s Daily Territorial Enterprise, the territory’s main newspaper in earlier days; it always surprised him when the letters were published. It made him question the editors’ judgment. His high opinion of them declined because they couldn’t find something better than his literature to print.

A letter came from that same newspaper offering Twain a job as city editor even as he wondered what his future held. Though he had so recently been a millionaire, the job offer with a twenty-five-dollar salary seemed like a fortune. The offer thrilled him.

mark-twain-391112_960_720Then doubts set in. What did he know of editing? He felt unfit for the position. Yet refusing the job meant that he’d soon have to rely on the kindness of others for a meal, and that he had never done.

So necessity forced Twain into taking an editor’s job though he felt ill-equipped. He arrived in Virginia, Nevada Territory, dressed more as a miner than an editor in a blue woolen shirt, pantaloons stuffed into the top of his boots, slouch hat, and a “universal navy revolver slung to his belt.”

The chief editor, Mr. Goodman, took Twain under his wing and trained him to be a reporter. The young man had finally found something he excelled in.

As writers, many of us can relate to Twain’s doubts. A myriad of talented authors have come before us. What do we have to offer?

It is comforting to realize that a young man destined to become one of America’s best-loved authors began with humility. A seasoned and kindly editor taught him the trade; Twain’s talent took him the rest of the way.

What would have happened if Mark Twain hadn’t lost a million dollars? His words may have been lost to us. Such classics as The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, and The Prince and the Pauper might never have been written.

When we ponder our failures, our rejected works, and lost opportunities, we should remember that situations change. We won’t always feel as we do today. God has the ability to put us in the right place at the right time with the right attitude.

Just like He did with Samuel Clemens, America’s beloved Mark Twain.

 

Sources

Twain, Mark. Roughing It, Penguin Books, 1981.