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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Dr. Rosie Milligan
(323) 750-3592
Drrosie@aol.com

Sixteenth Annual Black Writers On Tour Conference Is Larger Than Ever!
Bring The Whole Family—There’s Something For Everybody
Dr. Rosie Milligan brings the Black Writers On Tour Writers’ Conference back to Carson, California—a Los Angeles neighboring city. This powerful one-day event will be held on Saturday, April 21, 2012 from 9:00 A.M to 6:00 P.M at the Congresswoman JMM Community Center, 801 E. Carson Street, Carson, California 90746. This conference will be more dynamic than ever, showcasing more than 100 Black authors. There will be literary agents and publishers gathering for this powerful one-day event. The publishing industry has changed; the Internet, Social Media, E-books and Print-On-Demand have taken the publishing industry in a completely new direction. The days are gone forever for aspiring writers to have to beg and to wait to have their work published. This conference has been designed to provide writers and aspiring writers with the practical information they need to be successful in the literary industry. This year’s theme is, “Literacy is Everybody’s Business—Who Will Tell Our Story?” There will be local authors and authors from across the country participating. For past events we have had 5,000-6,000 in attendance.
This year’s highlight: “Children Writers Showcase—Listen To The children! There is a free writing class for children ages 10-15. Children wishing to enter the writing contest and win cash must submit their stories or poems no later than March, 15th, 2012. We are encouraging teachers to have their students enter the contest. Our youngest author was 7 years old. Our children are our future writers; they are the ones who will continue the preservation of African-American culture, via telling their stories and helping others to tell their stories.
Chat with Fiction, Non-Fiction, Poetry, Children, Hip-Hop, Urban Street and, Christian writers. Attend the Poetry Jam Competition from 4 to 6p.m—WIN CASH! There will be open exhibits and authors signing throughout the day.
Writers’ workshops will be held throughout the day and will cover a variety of topics. Authors wishing to gain exposure, attract new readers, or sell books, and for all wishing to participate in the Poetry Jam Competition, visit www.blackwritersontour.com or call (323) 750-3592
WRITER’S SEMINARS
1. How To Write A Book Made Simple And Your Publishing Options
2. How To Write A Best-selling Novel
3. How To Develop Characters That Leap Off The Page
4. Protecting Your Writing Rights, Trademark And Patent Rights
5. Creative Writing Class For Beginners
6. How To Increase Your Book Exposure & Sales Via Social Media, Face book, Twitter, My Space, YouTube, Blog, LinkedIn, etc.
7. What You Need To Know To Be A Great Guest On Radio, Keep The Phone Ringing, Sell Books, And Get Invited Back.
8. Turning you book into movie
9. How To Operate A Successful Home-based Business; Recordkeeping For Tax Compliance.

GENERAL PUBLIC SEMINARS, SHOWCASES AND DISCUSSIONS
1. Children’s Writing Class
3. Children’s Writing Class Contest Showcase
4. A Dialogue About Street Fiction, Hip-Hop, Urban Fiction—Are They Helpful or Are they Harmful/
5. A Close-Up look At Jobs/Careers In The Publishing Industry—Many!
6. Poetry, Open Mic.
7. Poetry Jam Competition
8. Let The Elders Speak Forum: They Will Address: Sex, Music, Health, Money, Religion, Education, History, And The Impact Of Each On The Next Generation

Count Down to Nanowrimo

I think it is just a little under 3 hours until the

nanowrimo. My goal is to write 2 to 3,000 words per day. I will see.

“Show me your friends, and I’ll tell you who you are,” a special co-worker once told me. First, let me explain what special means. In Ebonics, we’ll say, ”She’s a special case.” Or if someone is not dealing with a full deck, but yet are loveable, we’ll say, ”She’s special.” So as you see, this was a ”gem” spoken out of a ‘’special” person’s mouth.
Although, at the time, I didn’t quite understand what she meant, I now know what she was talking about is called ”character.” In life, this could be a bad thing, but in fiction this is a good thing. Nothing works better for memorable fiction than strong characters with flaws. To get to the point, how does one create memorable characters? Sol Stein, in his book, Stein On Writing, points out that eccentricity is at the heart of all strong characterizations. In short, the most effective characters in fiction are to some degree bizarre.
Character is an essential part of the best fiction. Think of all the memorable characters in fiction. When you think of the books whose characters resound in your head, you don’t think about, well this happened and that happened, (plot), you generally think of who the protagonist was. Words such as ”Scrooge,” ”Pollyanna,” and even ”Uncle Tom” developed in our culture to express a personality, an outlook, a character trait. And in spite of my dislike for the Antebellum South, from my first reading at fifteen, Scarlettt O’Hara and Rhett Butler stenciled a place in my memory as colorful characters. (Who can ever forget Rhett Butler’s last sardonic words, ”My dear, I don’t give a d–?.”
As an African American, I grew up during the 50’s with no role models in my fiction. No archetypes that had any relevancy to my life. But now, I–and readers from all races– are blessed with a list of memorable Afrocentric characters. Janie ( who left 3 husbands), creator, Zora Neale Hurston. Sula, Milkman. Pilate. Sethe (who cut her baby’s throat rather than see her back in slavery). Creator, Toni Morrison. Nana Pouissant (who built bottle trees to protect her family), creator, Julie Dash/ Daughters of the Dust. Likewise, I’m hoping that my fictional characters–Jewel, Big Mama Lily, Nefertiti, Solly, Pharaoh and Reverend–will one day also become household names in the literary corridors of my reader’s mind.
Eccentricity has frequently been at the heart of strong characterization for good reason. Ordinariness is what readers have enough of in life. The most effective characters have profound roots in human behavior. Their richest feelings may be similar to those held by many others. However, as characters their eccentricities dominate the readers first view of them. The first time I encountered this is through the character of Pilate, from Song of Solomon. She has no navel, yet has the ability to communicate with her dead father. I am still haunted by her dying
Another reason character is so important in plotting your fiction is that people are different. The same tragic event can happen to two people and have different effects. One person can lose his job and never bounce back, and another will be galvanized by the same event. These are the types of points of departure you can examine in fiction through your characters.
These are the three major techniques I think will make the difference in creating memorable characters who leap off the page.
• 1) Point of view. Even if the character is eccentric, you should make the reader understand his world view.
• 2) Specificity in Details. Develop your character’s quirks, habits, motivations, and hobbies.
• 3) Challenges. Fiction that takes risks and challenges our smug assumptions about life.
Don’t just write about normal situations. Examine the human hearts and the depths of what people will go when faced with moral dilemmas. What will a mother do when she is broke and hungry and has children to feed?
To distinguish between plot-driven fiction and character-driven fiction is the same distinction you find between popular movies and serious movies. The former categories often satisfies you, but, like Chinese food, can leave you ravenous after a few hours. Character-driven fiction/movies will stick to your ribs like ‘’soul food.” It will make you examine the human heart and condition. Most of all, it often disturbs you like the book and movie, Beloved, yet you will find yourself driven to read these same books over and over.

Happy Independence Day!

I really feel this day is more than just the declaring of our freedom as a nation. I feel it is a symbolic day for writers. We now have more choices than ever to publish our work and find our readership.  It reminds me of something Chris Rock said on an Oprah show.“Having options is true wealth.”

Well, then, writers, we are now wealthy. Look at our options to publish on Kindle, Nook, (Barnes and Noble), Smashwords, scribd, Createspace, Lulu.

Black Butterfly News:

is about to change. Check out the book trailer http://alturl.com/x8rn7

How can one choice impact so many lives? http://alturl.com/aaav3

My book LA Blues  was chosen as one of the top 2 picks by book Reviewer Fran Lewis! Please pick up a copy. Check out Fran Lewis’s review. http://ning.it/lOgEyb

Join my blog tour with bestselling author, Shelia Goss, http://alturl.com/xxyrs

Get a sneak peek. Check out reading from my novel, LA Blues by Dr. Michelle McGriff http://alturl.com/r73m6

Check out Black Butterfly Presents: The Miraculous Power of Massage by Van T. Womack.

Would you like a massage? http://alturl.com/o3zpq<p>

Hostage of Lies by Maxine Thompson

Book Review by Leigh McKnight

Suspenseful, Educational, Enjoyable, Powerful—All that and more
Returning home after seven year, Nefertiti is faced with a number of unresolved issues with the men in her life, including her father who did the unthinkable—forcing her to give up her daughter at birth. Though she returned home seeking answers, she also knew she owed some answers as well—her husband from whom she had kept a secret that could have ruined her marriage.

Hostage of Lies is a powerful portrayal of African-American lives with all the ingredients for a best seller. Maxine Thompson engages you from page one to page 310 with a rich mixture of love, lies, secrets, believable characters, rich African-American history, skeletons, betrayal, pain, racial issues, status, humor, lost loves, infidelity, mental illness, black sheep in the family and many other family issues that leave you wanting more—much more.

Titi’s quest to find her daughter after decades is very real and moving. It lets one know that very often when love is involved, time stands still. I was deeply touched by the warm spirit, perhaps the forgiving or just moving forward and live attitude of Zora Desiree Fairchild, Nefertiti’s daughter.

The structure of this story was brilliantly and flawlessly executed by Thompson, the voices of the characters were strong and believable and I love all the back story that brought me to where Nefertiti’s journey ended. Hostage of Lies is so rich in African-American history that it wouldn’t surprise me if it becomes a required reading piece in schools. This story crosses all kinds of lines. Any and everyone will enjoy.
Fantastic Maxine Thompson—–5 *****

1. Tell us about your writing team. As a husband and wife, how did you begin writing together?

Actually, we teamed up as writers before we were married. Kathleen read Mike’s first novel and said, “All of your female characters should be murdered in the first chapter. You don’t really think women act like that, do you?” Since he wanted a third date, he let her rewrite them.

2. How does your background(s) as archaeologists inform your writing?

Archaeology is the heart of what we write. The science has been a part of our lives since long before we went to college–for example, Kathleen was on her first archaeological excavation at the age of ten–but certainly our academic backgrounds and our 35 years of archaeological field experience have become the cornerstones of our books. Our stories always begin and end with the archaeological record, and what it tells us about the rise and fall of prehistoric civilizations.

3 & 7. How do you re-create a world that is 600 years old? How much research do you complete for each book?

Writing fiction based upon archaeology and history is a balancing act. We always start with the archaeological record. It establishes the basic facts of what was happening in the 1400s. For example, we know from the burned villages and mutilated bodies, including those of children, that the warfare was brutal. Then we move to the historical record, and ask, what was the culture like at the point of contact with Europeans? By studying the Mourning Wars of the 1600s we get a clearer understanding of the practice of Iroquoian warfare, particularly how captives were taken and treated. Lastly, we study the oral history that has been passed down for centuries. There are literally hundreds of versions of the Peacemaker story.
For us, the hardest part of writing these books was selecting which details of Iroquoian oral history to use. We had to establish a kind of oral history baseline, which means that we looked for commonalities in the stories. Where many versions agreed, like on the subject of where Dekanawida was born, we used that detail. If stories disagreed dramatically, for example on what happened to him at the end of his life, we had real decisions to make. For the most part, we try to write about human beings, not divine beings, and that posed a problem here. Some versions of the Peacemaker story have Dekanawida establishing peace among the Iroquois, then traveling across the ocean to become the person known as Jesus. We chose not to use this element of oral history, not because we disbelieve, but rather because it seemed unlikely that this was part of the Peacemaker story prior to the arrival of missionaries in the 1600s. Making such decisions is, undoubtedly, the greatest challenge of writing prehistorical fiction.

4. Tell us about the Iroquois. What was their language like? What was their culture like?

Northern Iroquoian languages are very beautiful and sophisticated, containing nuances that can’t be duplicated in English. However, the origins of Northern Iroquoians is a hotly debated and very complex topic among archaeologists. Generally, we agree that the period from roughly A.D. 1000-1450 demonstrates fluid and shifting alliances, expanding trade networks, and changing settlement patterns. One thing is for certain: early Iroquoian cultures were remarkably adaptable and diverse.

At around A.D. 1000–the period we wrote about in People of the Masks–most Iroquoian peoples lived in small fishing villages or farming hamlets, primarily along rivers where they had good fertile soils and easy access to water. Toward the end of this period, they began moving away from watercourses and started building their villages atop easily defensible hilltops. Some were palisaded. For example, the Bates site in Chenango county, and the Sackett site near Canandaigua, New York, both of which date to the thirteenth century. The period we’re writing about in People of the Longhouse and The Dawn Country is the Late Iroquoian, which lasted from around A.D. 1350 to European contact. This is a critical period. At around A.D. 1400, the first evidence for individual tribes appears. Differences in pottery styles, burial customs, and types of houses, demonstrate divisions between Iroquoian groups. As well, small villages begin to amalgamate with larger ones, forming cohesive social groups, or, we suspect, nations.

A.D. 1400 is also the time when the Iroquois were building the most impressive longhouses, and many were elaborately fortified. At the Schoff site outside of Onondaga, New York, the people constructed a longhouse 400 feet long, twenty-two feet wide, and nearly as tall. The palisaded settlement may have housed 1,500 to 2,000 people, consisting of many different clans.

As people who’ve read our previous books know, often this type of aggregation is a telltale sign for archaeologists of interpersonal violence. Simply put, people crowd together for defensive purposes. This is also when cannibalism first appears in the Iroquoian archaeological record in the form of cut and cooked human bones.

Why did warfare break out? The fact that the climate had grown cooler and drier certainly contributed to the violence. We know that droughts were more frequent, growing seasons shorter, and food shortages probably more common. As well, larger villages deplete resources at a faster rate. Game populations, nut forests, firewood, and fertile soils would all have played out more quickly, which means they must have had to move their villages more often. Moving may have brought them into conflict with neighbors who needed the food resources just as desperately.
The warfare, we know, was violent.
At the Alhart site in the Oak Orchard Creek drainage in western New York, archaeologists found evidence of burned longhouses and food, and the dismembered remains of seventeen people–most of them male. Historically, it was common practice for women and children to either be killed on site, or taken captive and marched away while the male warriors were tortured and killed. At this site, the fragments of a child’s skull were found in one storage pit, and the skull of a woman in another storage pit. As well, fifteen male skulls were found in a storage pit on top of charred corn, and were probably placed there as severed heads, in-the-flesh. Some of them were burned. Two had suffered blows to the front of the head. We discuss many other such examples in the foreword to The Dawn Country.
As well, artifacts made from human bone are plentiful on Northern Iroquoian sites that date from the late fourteenth through the early sixteenth centuries. For example, two skulls were found at the Parsons site in Toronto. The Parsons site was an elaborately palisaded fifteenth century village. The two skulls, one male and one female, were found in a trash pit inside the inner palisade. Many other human bone artifacts are found in similar “refuse” situations. Human skull pendants or rattles are found across Ontario and New York at the Moatfield, Winking Bull, Uren, Pound, Crawford Lake, Jarret-Lahmer, Draper, Keffer, Lawson, Campbell, Clearview, Parsons, Beeton, Roebuck, Lite, Salem, and Glenbrook sites. Often the skulls, or skull fragments, have cut marks made by stone tools that are suggestive of scalping (as you already know from earlier paragraphs, it was not a French custom brought to the New World and adopted by the tribes. Scalping existed long before Europeans arrived). Such skulls were found at the Draper, Keffer and Lawson sites. Ground and polished fibulas and femurs (leg bones), as well as arm bones (radii) were used for beads, and scraping tools. Pierced mandibles (jaws), and finger and toe bones, were used as pendants. Ulnae (arm bones) became awls or daggers, and were also strung as beads. Why is it important to archaeologists that all of these artifacts were found in trash middens? Because Iroquoian peoples took very good care of their dead relatives. They had lengthy, and beautiful, burial rituals to make certain their loved ones reached the Land of the Dead. Since these human remains were not properly cared for, it suggests the bones may have come from less valuable members of society, like enemy captives.

Let’s take a few moments to discuss the Iroquoian perspective on captives. By the l400’s, as it was in historic times, warfare and raiding for captives was probably the most important method of gaining prestige in Northern Iroquoian societies. When a person died, the spiritual power of the clan was diminished, especially if that person had been a community leader. The places of missing family members literally remained vacant until they could be “replaced,” and their spiritual power–which was embodied in their name–transferred to another person.
Historical records tell us that during the 1600’s, the Iroquois dispatched war parties whose sole intent was to bring home captives to replace family members and restore the spiritual strength of the clans. These were called “mourning wars.” Clan matrons usually organized the war parties and ordered their warriors to bring them captives suitable for adoption to assuage their grief and restock the village. Once the clan had a suitable replacement, the captive underwent the Requickening Ceremony. In this ritual, the dead person’s soul was “raised up” and transferred to the captive, along with his or her name.
This may seem odd to modern readers, but keep the religious context in mind. The Iroquois believed that the souls of those who died violently could not find the Path of Souls in the sky that led to the Land of the Dead. They were excluded from the afterlife and doomed to spend eternity wandering the earth, seeking revenge. However, such souls could find rest if they were transferred—along with their name—to the body of another person. In a very concrete way, the relatives of the dead person were trying to save him.

The souls of men and women killed in battles that were not “raised up” were believed, according to some Seneca traditions, to move into trees. It was these trees with indwelling warrior spirits that the People cut to serve as palisade logs, thereby surrounding the village with Standing Warriors.
Iroquoian oral history speaks of this as a particularly brutal time, and clearly the archaeological record supports their stories.

But the violence was also the catalyst for one of the most important events in the history of the world. It led to the rise of a legendary hero, a Peacemaker, named Dekanawida, who established the Great Law of Peace and founded of the League of the Iroquois–a confederacy of five tribes: the Onondaga, Oneida, Mohawk, Cayuga and Seneca.

Without the League, the United States would not exist today, nor would our unique understanding of democracy. Concepts like one-person one-vote, or referendum and recall, were not European. They were Iroquoian.
And they would prove to be irresistible to the wave of colonists fleeing oppression in Europe.
In 1775, James Adair wrote a book called History of the American Indian, in which he described the Iroquoian system of government, by saying, “Their whole constitution breathes nothing but liberty…there is equality of condition, manners, and privileges…”
Indeed, the system of government espoused by the League was everything that Europeans monarchies were not. The Iroquois refused to put power in the hands of any single person, lest that power be abused. The League sought to maximize individual freedoms, and minimize governmental interference in people’s lives. The League taught that a system of government should preserve individual rights, while striving to insure the public welfare; it should reward initiative, champion tolerance, and establish inalienable human rights. They accepted as fact that men and women were equal and respected the diversity of peoples, their religions, economic and political ideals, their dreams.
On the eve of the American Revolution in 1776, English papers began circulating the following account, which was, incidentally, meant to be insulting: “The darling passion of the American is liberty, and that in its fullest extent; nor is it the original natives only to whom this passion is confined; our colonists sent thither seem to have imbibed the same principles.”
Indeed, they had.
Gifted writers like Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin would openly fan the flames of that “passion” for liberty, and set in motion a chain reaction that has yet to end. That passion would become a sweeping wildfire that would race around the globe and shape the very heart of what would, centuries later, become known as The Free World.
The Iroquois, quite simply, changed the course of history.

5. How did you come up with idea for book one, People of the Longhouse?

We’ve been studying Iroquoian cultures since 1978, so the idea has been percolating for a long time, but we couldn’t write this quartet of books about the founding of the League of the Iroquois until we’d set the stage first. It’s hard to understand any culture unless you grasp the people’s past. For example, no one could really understand America today if he or she didn’t know about the Revolutionary War, the Declaration of Independence, or the Civil War. That’s why we wrote the North America’s Forgotten Past series, to educate readers about North America’s magnificent prehistory. It’s taken us seventeen books to get to the point that we felt our readers would know enough to appreciate what happened with the Iroquois in the fifteenth century, and the impact they had on the future.

6. In Book 2, The Dawn Country, you continue the series. I understand this will be part of a quartet. What can we expect to see in Book 3?
Yes, the People of the Longhouse saga will have four books. The first duology chronicles the childhoods of the leading characters, and the second duology follows them as adults. In the third book, The Broken Land, readers will see Odion, Wrass, Zateri and Baji, as adults fighting for the life of their world. They’ll also see Odion, now Sky Messenger, be married and began the struggle for peace.

8. As a writing team, how do you divide up your books?
Because we have different expertises in archaeology and history, the best qualified person drafts out the bare bones of the plot and characters. Then we end up handing the book back and forth a dozen times, rewriting each other’s writing, adding more details, internal thoughts, and honing the action sequences, until we’re both happy with it. We wouldn’t recommend our technique for other couples, however. Writing is a very personal art, one where you infuse the words with your heart and soul. Allowing another person to tear your story apart and put it back together again requires absolute faith in your partner’s talent.

Thanks, Maxine!

Michael and Kathleen

W. Michael and Kathleen O’Neal Gear
Authors of
The People of the Longhouse, et. al

Maxine Thompson: Thank you for a fine interview. W. Michael and Kathleen O’Neal Gear

Article 1-26-11
Blacks Hanging On Life Support

By Dr. Rosie Milligan
http://www.drrosie.com/

Blacks must fund their own economic liberation. How long will Blacks depend on others for economic oxygen? We must learn economic CPR and resuscitate ourselves. Almost every major event held by Blacks in Los Angeles, California, was cancelled last year due to a lack of funding/sponsorship from non-Blacks. If it were not for White folks’ money, the NAACP and other groups would not be able to hold their events.

I had to cancel Black Writers On Tour last year for lack of financial help. I have funded a large amount of this event’s cost from my personal funds. I am at retirement age, and I cannot continue to do so. Via these writing conferences, I have helped authors from age 7 to age 95 tell their stories, because Literacy Is Everybody’s Business. I have helped 275 Black authors see their books in print and have helped more than 30 authors start their own publishing companies. I helped launch a major literary agent’s career on the West Coast, Thompson’s Literary Agency. Our forefathers took their stories to their grave because they had no one to help them tell it. History will repeat itself if we do not learn from their experience. When we fail to record what we did, others will come along and claim those honors; and if we are not mindful, we will be written out of history. Instead, we will be remembered by the pages written by a one-sided player-hating and insensitive media.

I hope and pray that even after my transition there will be someone whom I have touched who will carry on the legacy of assuring that our stories will be told. Mary McLeod Bethune stated in her will, “I leave you hope, I leave you love, I leave you a thirst for knowledge.” I want to leave you a thirst for knowledge, and I challenge you to continue to make literacy everybody’s business and to see to it that our stories, not his-story, is passed on to the next generation. I challenge you to leave no Black child behind when it comes to reading and writing. Our stories may not be televised, but they can be written in the pages of history.

Haven’t you noticed that it is our Black children and adults who lag behind in reading and writing skills? So, then, who should be concerned? As a publisher, I see poorly written manuscripts with three hundred pages containing no paragraphs, without proper nouns capitalized, and many more major mistakes. If you don’t believe me, ask your child, even your adult child, to write a one-page topic on any subject and you be the judge for yourself.

The days are gone when one could just call a meeting to discuss, face-to-face, a grievance, complaint, etc. Instead, you are asked to “put it in writing,” and a poorly written communiqué will get no response in most cases. Be it politically correct or not, people tend to judge one by the way they write and speak—so we must do better.

I need you to financially help me to keep this venue alive and well. I am reaching out to you so that you will not be able to say what people often say when things go south, “What happened to that business/organization?” I need your help. It’s not for me; it’s for those that I am concerned about. You can go to www.Blackwritersontour.com and make a donation via PayPal, or you can send your donations to Black Writers On Tour, 1425 W. Manchester Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90047.

Thank you in advanced for your assistance. You may have friends who want to help. Inform others about this noteworthy event. It is a tax-deductible donation.

Sincerely,

Dr. Rosie Milligan

INTERVIEW QUESTIONS WITH DR. MAXINE THOMPSON

1. What advice would you give to aspiring writers?
I would tell them to take a Creative Writing Class and an Advanced Creative Writing Class to learn the mechanics of writing a novel. I would also suggest taking a Screenwriting class to help with the pacing of the book so that it will read like a movie. I would suggest that they learn how to make a storyboard for the entire arc of the novel. It will help you see the beginning, middle, and end of the story. You can use pictures or 3X5 index cards to show the plotting and progress of your story. You can see clearly where you need to add more drama, dialogue or an action scene.

2. What is your daily writing schedule like?
I rise between five-thirty and six. I have coffee, exercise until seven-thirty, eat breakfast and then begin writing by eight. I work until five or six. I do this five days a week and sometimes six days if I’m falling behind in my schedule. I try to write a chapter a day. When I’m finished I spend about six to eight weeks editing my book. Then I let two to three people I trust read my book, get their feed back and go back through the editing process again. Then, finally, I send the manuscript off to my agent.

3. Do you plan on writing a non-fiction book?
Yes. I’ve written a proposal for one now. It’s about a woman who survived the H1N1 virus. She was misdiagnosed and suffered for weeks until the doctors finally came to the conclusion that she had the virus. She also has a son who was hospitalized at the same time of her illness and suffers from cerebral palsy. It’s a touching story and a triumphant one. Her husband kept everything together and was the saving grace. Their marriage, family and faith, is stronger because of his family’s medical challenges.

I also have another book I’m writing about my cousin’s daughter killing her grandmother. She stabbed her 96 times at age fourteen and was sentenced to forty years in prison. She’s almost thirty-one now and might be out on parole next year.

4 Do you plan to co-author a book with anyone?

Yes. I’d love to co-author a book with my son, Shannon. He helped edit my first five books. I would have been lost without his input. We’ve learned that we work well together. He’s got great ideas and fresh metaphors that impress me. He’s very busy as a computer engineer, so it will probably be about five years before we’re able to get the novel completed.

I also would like to co-author a book with my friend Fredricka Crowe. She’s a born philosopher. She has excellent skills in English and grammar. In my opinion, she’s a genius at storytelling. I’ve read three books that she’s written and they’re all profound. I admire her work and her work ethic. I think we would make a good writing team.

5 What cities are on your book tour?

I’ll be going to Chicago, Memphis, St. Louis, Louisville, KY, Lexington, KY, Jackson, MS, Tupelo, MS, Jackson, TN, Little Rock, AR, Detroit, MI, Atlanta, and Dallas, TX. I would love to make a stop in New York, California, and Birmingham, AL. If I’m able to make more stops, I will post the dates and venues on my website.

6 Where do you get your story ideas?

I get them from newspapers, blogs, and friends. I also watch CNN and try to incorporate some of the hottest topics into my work. Law & Order Special Victims Unit has also inspired some of my subplots. My husband and I, watch Law & Order everyday. Even if we’ve seen the program before, we still make comments about what’s happening.

My friends and family constantly fill me in on the drama that’s going on in their lives. Most want me to tell their story so someone can understand what they are going through. I’m very happy to oblige.

7 Can you see any of your books ever being optioned for movies?

Yes. I believe my first book, Knowing, would make a good movie. It has plenty of drama and lots of action. I’ve been approached by producers about some of my books being made into movies, but we’re only in the talking stages. Hopefully, in the near future you’ll see my work on the big screen. I also have written two screenplays and a soap opera that I hope to have produced as well. One screenplay was written for Denzel Washington in mind.

8 What do you think about social media?

I think it’s a good thing. Blogging, Twitter, Linkedin and Facebook are here to stay. You can connect with your readers instantly and get feedback daily. I would suggest to anyone who has a business or is a writer, to get a PR coach like Pam Perry or Alvin Romer. They are experts in social media. Both of them have helped me tremendously. I am not the greatest blogger and am terrible at Twitter, but I’m trying.

9 Do married people really have sex like the characters in your novels?

Yes. Statistics say that married people have the best sex. You know your partner. You know the best positions and what his or her likes or dislikes are. You don’t have to waste time trying to explore different scenarios, when you’re well versed with your partner’s needs. My husband and I have always enjoyed a passionate sex life. We’re very comfortable with each other and each other’s bodies. I love his thighs. He loves my buttocks and skin. We’ve slowed down some, but the desire is still strong. Married people know that their partner is going to be there every night, and that thought is comforting. Feeling his or her arms wrap around you is a powerful feeling. Being married makes the coupling all the more special because of the commitment you’ve made to each other.

10 How long do you plan to write?

I can see myself writing for another twenty to twenty-five more years. I’d like to travel more, and incorporate my travels into my novels. I never run out of story ideas. I don’t suffer from writer’s block. My mind races so fast, I need a tape recorder near my bed or in my car to keep up with my thoughts. Writing is my passion and I hope to get better at it as each year passes.


Delilah – When Love Deceives Tour

5 Questions with Shelia M Goss
Shelia Goss is jump starting the new year with the Delilah – When Love Deceives Online Tour by stopping by my blog. She’s celebrating the release of her tenth novel. Delilah is her first Christian fiction novel and it’s in stores everywhere.

Who are the main characters in Delilah?

Shelia: Delilah is the main character. She makes the mistake of falling in love with her pastor, Rev. Samson Judges. Delilah hasn’t had luck with men in the past but feels her luck has changed when she meets Samson. In her eyes, Samson’s perfect and can do no wrong. Delilah feels if given the chance, Samson could grow to love her. She doesn’t care he’s already engaged to marry someone else.

Samson was called to preach at a young age but he ran from his calling until after college. During his college years, he was what most would call a player but once he decided to dedicate his life to the Lord, he became celibate. Samson feels that his relationship with God is so strong that he can withstand any form of temptation. Up until he met Delilah, he was able to deal with the temptations of the flesh.

Both characters are dealing with deception in one form or another.

Maxine: How would you describe the genre in which you do most of your writing?

Shelia: I’ve been told that my stories are romance, chick-lit, romantic comedy and inspirational, so
I try not to pigeonhole myself. I write in multiple genres, including young adult. I enjoy reading Christian fiction so it was a natural transition for me to write books in the genre. The idea for my new book Delilah came to me a few years ago and in 2010, the opportunity to get it published presented itself.

Maxine: What is your favorite sort of character?

Shelia: One that is flawed. No one’s perfect in real life, so the characters in my books aren’t either. They have issues just like a friend, a co-worker or a stranger on the street would have.

Maxine: What is your favorite book of all time?

Shelia: Without a doubt, the Bible.

Maxine: If you could leave one word of advice to people in general, what would it be?

Shelia: With God, nothing is impossible.

More about Delilah:
Behind every successful man is a good woman. The downfall of a good man is a woman up to no good.

Thirty and fine, Samson Judges is preacher of the Peaceful Rest Missionary Baptist Church . He’s beloved by his congregation, but temptation is about to strike in the form of divalicious beauty Delilah, and only the Good Lord knows if Samson will be able to keep his head on straight with her. Especially considering he’s about to be married to Julia Rivers. Julia helped shape Samson into the man he is, but Delilah wants to knock him down. He doesn’t know she’s been hired to distract him by real estate developer William Trusts, who wants to acquire the land where Samson’s church stands…. Samson feels like his relationship with God puts him above it all, but his weakness for Delilah may just cause him to lose everything. ~ Black Expressions Book Club
More about Shelia M Goss:
Shelia M. Goss is the Essence Magazine & Black Expressions Book Club Best-Selling author of My Invisible Husband, Roses are Thorns, Paige’s Web, Double Platinum, His Invisible Wife, Hollywood Deception and the teen series The Lip Gloss Chronicles. Delilah is her tenth novel and first Christian fiction novel. To learn more, visit her website: www.sheliagoss.com, www.twitter.com/sheliamgoss or www.facebook.com/sheliagoss.

Delilah is in stores everywhere or can be purchased from any of the online retailers.

Amazon http://www.amazon.com/dp/1601628854?tag=officiwebsi03-20&camp=14573&creative=327641&linkCode=as1&creativeASIN=1601628854&adid=19YJPN9NQBAAXDJN59CQ&  

Barnes and Noble http://search.barnesandnoble.com/Delilah/Shelia-M-Goss/e/9781601628855/?itm=1&USRI=delilah+shelia+goss  

Borders

BlackExpressions.com (HARD COVER ONLY)

What Agents Look For in A Writer’s Works

What Agents Look For in A Writer’s Works

Dr. Maxine Thompson
http://www.maxinethompson.com
http://www.maxineshow.com

Like many small business owners, I have to multi-task, so as a literary agent, I recently had this insight while at the Pacific Ocean. When I wear my agent cap, the stories that I love the most, are the ones which hold my attention. Simple as that. Nothing esoteric. The same way these stories hold my attention, they tend to hold an editor at a large publishing house’s attention. Ergo, these are the manuscripts which get the book deals.

A writer’s work has to catch my attention in the first sentence, then the second, then the first page, or the next 5-10 pages. I don’t care how many projects I have in the hop, I should be able to sit down, block out the other things pressing, and read your book with interest. That’s a compelling read. Even if I can’t finish it, I should be drawn to want to come back to find out what happened.

I’m an agent who happens to be a writer, too. This is another epiphany I had while at the ocean. As writers, we have to write as if we are writing for people with severe Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorders. A book has to be very compelling to keep this type of person’s attention, and I think a lot of people suffer from a little of this syndrome now. Why?

Because today, many people are on information overload. People tend to have short attention spans. We can get information on Myspace, millions of websites, Blackplanet.com, emails, teleseminars, ipods, webinars, ezines, internet radio interviews, Youtube. The list goes on.

People are busy, raising families, working jobs, or running businesses. They are caught up in the fast-pace of life that is the New Millennium. As a result, people tend to want instant gratification. So I take this into consideration when I read a client’s work.

What are some of the things agents look for?

Personally, I look for writers of fiction who have more than one book in them. Preferably, these writers have a number of stories to tell, and they can make a full-time career out of their writing. I’d like to see writers whose books can be translated to the silver screen one day.

Where should you begin? A good query letter is a place to begin. You can find out how to write them in the Literary Market Place, or The Writer’s Market.

A serious writer will take time to visit the guidelines when submitting to an agency. I am an independent agent with Sheba Media Group (www.shebamedia.com.) Do not send attachments unless the agency asks for it. Often the writers do not follow the guidelines, and this is a turn off to an agent.

If someone asks you for a synopsis, a logline for a screen play, or your novel’s first 3 chapters, then make sure this is what you provide—not your self-published book with the cover torn off. If you have already self-published, send in the manuscript version to the agent.

These are some tips for writers:

Make sure there are no typos in your query letter, your synopsis or your manuscript. It not only discredits your work, it gives an impression that you don’t respect the craft of writing.

Have your work edited and proofread before submitting to an agent. Sometimes, as writers, we only get one shot at an opportunity. Be prepared if you want to be successful.

Follow the submission guidelines of a literary agency. For example, if the guidelines say they do not accept novellas, do not send novellas. Wait for your release letter, which says that you are the writer of said material.

Send a query letter and a screenplay in the proper format. Use Final Draft or other screenwriting software.

If you want to be a screenwriter, study the craft.

As a novelist, you should develop a good writing style and have an interesting flair for words. This is one reason why urban fiction is so popular. It is written in hip hop/urban vernacular, which has a very authentic feel and it reflects the world as seen by the characters who have lived the street life.

As a writer, you should develop a strong voice. Your particular world view should shine through your writing.

Create a page turner by studying the craft of fiction writing, (which includes the elements of fiction, such as pacing, revising, creating memorable characters, among other techniques.) You can read books, take classes, or join critique groups.

Write about exciting characters who take action. Do not use stereotypical characters. If you use a pimp, make him different, such as the character Terrance Howard portrayed in the movie, “Hustle and Flow.”

Use a compelling storyline. Stories are not about the character’s ordinary day or routine. The best stories are about disruption of the norm, and how the characters coped with the change. Good stories are about characters who go through a journey, which change their lives, for better or worse, by the end of the story. This is your character arc.

These are some things you can learn to do which will help improve your writing.

Learn how to set up a scene, then pay it off. Raise a story question and make sure you answer it by the end of the story.

Learn how to write dialogue which sings. This will really help with screenwriting.

Learn how to use descriptive words, vigorous verbs, and evoke emotions through the five senses. Learn how to make a novel move like a movie, with visuals, settings, showing vs. telling, and providing a life lesson.
Learn how to develop your characters so that they feel real and like someone a reader will spend 300 pages with. Give your characters backstory, an agenda, and conflicted desires.
Learn how to make a story flow, through different techniques, such as Joseph Campbell’s, “The Hero’s Journey.”

In conclusion, writing a fictional story is work. But who ever said anything worth having would be easy? Learn to be the best writer you can become, and an agent will be glad to represent and negotiate a book deal for your work.

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