Thursday, January 30, 2014

Lisa Mangum and Heidi Taylor!

Okay, Lisa Mangum and Heidi Taylor were great! I really wanted to ask Lisa about how she balances having essentially two careers, writing and editing, and she said some really helpful things! At work, she works--she's an editor. When she gets home, she's allowed to play with words and write things that she wouldn't do as an editor. She turns that editor-self off and plays around. Physical location seems to play a very important role in that. Interesting.

P.S. - If you're interested in knowing more about Lisa Mangum or Heidi Taylor, check out http://www.shadowmountain.com/authors/lisa-mangum or just http://www.shadowmountain.com
One of my roommates just about died when she heard that Lisa Mangum was in my class. She wrote the Hourglass Door trilogy, and my roommate loves them!

Usually, since Wednesdays are my really long days, I'm pretty tired by the time I get to this class, The Publishing Business. I loved hearing them talk about Shadow Mountain and what they do there. We also got to work on pitches. Some people had some dang good ones! I wrote one up during class since I haven't done one before, and I shared it. I mean, who wouldn't when you have two editors right there who can tell you what's good about it and what's not so good. I was surprised at how long it took me to write my pitch. I mean, granted there wasn't very much time, but still, I kept looking at it and then wanting to reword it. Finally, after like five or six rewrites in fifteen minutes, I knew I had to just say it, even if it wasn't anything super fantastic. One small part of mine was decently good. I think the rest needs to be rewritten or just dumped. Want to see what I wrote? Haha, prepare yourself for something very mediocre!

Deceived on her wedding night, a foreign princess goes from riches to rags. She lights a fire of rebellion and risks her own life in an attempt to save her country and those she loves.

There you have it!

So, what was good about it? They were intrigued by the very first part, deceived on her wedding night. That's the part that makes it different, thought they weren't really sure of the manner of the deception, so that needs to be somewhat cleared up. The rest of it is just really generic. I knew that for sure about the "riches to rags" part.

Basically, I want to make this sound like a good story with familiar elements but that has something unique and compelling. It was a really good exercise! After this, I thought back to the cover blurbs I did at my internship the other day and wanted to look over them again. I probably did some similar things, though not intending to do so.

On another note, I just finished Icefall, and yes, it is a good book! I don't normally read middle grade novels, but I was so intrigued by Matthew J. Kirby and the bits that he said about it--that's what a good pitch gets you! It was a good break from YA, though. The last YA book that I read was too much. You know when you can totally see a huge plot hole and then you just get bored because you've figured out exactly how it's going to end? Well, it went more or less like that. So, it's been a few weeks since I've picked up a YA novel. But, I'm happy to say that after reading Icefall, I'm back on track! Yay! Time to find another good book to read!

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