Posts Tagged ‘freelance writing’

Twilight the Book Teaches New Writers How to Get Published

By now, everyone is starting to understand that Twilight the book and Twilight the movie are quickly becoming the next cultural phenomenon, much like Harry Potter was. But, as a writer, one of the most amazing things about Stephenie Meyer’s novel, Twilight, is the fact that it destroys many of the myths about getting yourself published. And more importantly, Stephenie provides a wonderful play-by-play of her experience getting her first book, Twilight, published.

Twilight the Book offers New Writers Hope

Stephenie Meyer’s completed her spellbinding manuscript of Twilight the book in only three months. This is an amazing feat, regardless of the fact that she describes how the process of writing it became almost like an addiction. She couldn’t stop thinking about it, but was at least able to control the desire to write enough to only write at night after the kids were in bed. Her description of the writing process, which she provides in detail at her website, is almost as intriguing to me as the novel itself. Every writer out there can feel the sort of emotions she describes as she struggles to get the words on paper in the same way it appears on the movie screen of her mind. Soon enough, the book would become Twilight the movie. But first, she needed to get published.

How to Get Published Using Twilight, the Book, as a Guide

The story that Stephenie describes is a wonderful lesson in humility and perseverance. Every new writer who has ever attempted to publish a book can feel the pain and rejection she describes when receiving rejection after rejection, some more harsh than others. She describes one case in particular as follows:

The only rejection that really hurt was from a small agent who actually read the first chapter before she dropped the axe on me. The meanest rejection I got came after Little, Brown had picked me up for a three-book deal, so it didn’t bother me at all. I’ll admit that I considered sending back a copy of that rejection stapled to the write-up my deal got in Publisher’s Weekly, but I took the higher road.


The Process of Getting Published

The process she describes to get published, however, is a perfect outline for all new novelists to follow. Unlike common belief among young writers, you do not simply mail off your manuscript to every publishing house you can find. The first step is the most difficult, you need an agent. It may be a long and difficult road, but a good writer with excellent skills and an amazing storyline will ultimately find success, just as Ms. Meyer did. The road she took to final publication was as follows:

  • Subscribed to WritersMarket.com in order to find publishers and literary agencies that accept unsolicited submissions
  • Listened to advice regarding “good” literary agencies with an established reputation
  • Sent out multiple queries to all of those contacts
  • Suffered through countless rejections until Writers House asked to see more of her book

Her description of the moment Writer’s House asked for her entire manuscript is every writer’s ultimate dream. She writes:

It was a very nice letter. She’d gone back with a pen and twice underlined the part where she’d typed how much she enjoyed the first three chapters (I still have that letter, of course), and she asked for the whole manuscript. That was the exact moment when I realized that I might actually see Twilight in print, and really one of the happiest points in my whole life. I did a lot of screaming.


Every Writer’s Dream

A month later she was picked up by Jodi Reamer, an agent with Writer’s House. After a bit of editing work and Jodi promoting her book, before long Stephenie’s novel was picked up by Little, Brown and Company. The entire process? Six months. The book is not skyrocketing in popularity and is due to become a blockbuster hit as Twilight, the movie, is set to break records. It’s an amazing tale isn’t it? Stephenie’s tale, that is. And every writer out there, the successful and the not-so-successful, find a bit of solace in her success, because if it’s still possible for new writers like Stephenie to realize such wonderful success - then there’s still room in the world for future success stories just like hers.

15 Year Old Collapses After Playing World of Warcraft

When a 15 year old boy from Western Sweden collapsed after playing World of Warcraft for 20 hours, did it prove that online gaming is harmful to your health?

Is World of Warcraft Harmful For Your Health?

In the past couple of years I’ve written a number of articles about online gaming. In fact, just six months ago I completed a niche analysis report for a client about the dramatic growth (and projected growth) of the online gaming industry. According to that research, Massive Multiplayer Online Games - giant virtual worlds like Warcraft - represent one of the most substantial segments of the online gaming industry. Americans love immersing themselves into a magical and virtual online world where anything is possible. But are we gaming too much? Is gaming now the new alcoholism of this generation?

15 Year Old Swedish Boy Collapses

According to the report in the Swedish media, the 15 year old boy gathered with seven friends, and all of them played World of Warcraft around the clock. They hardly ate and they hardly slept….for 20 hours. After being raced to the hospital, doctors determined that the boy’s biological systems were out of wack due to sleep deprivation, partial starvation, and “too long a stretch of concentrated game playing.”

You read that right. Too much concentrated game playing.

The truth, discovered in the process of writing the niche analysis, is that not only children are at risk of suffering such a fate. According to recent trends, older women over 40 now make up the majority of online gamers (when you take sites like Yahoo games, MSN games, and other web-based games into consideration). Surprisingly, adults are also more likely than teens to stay up late playing games. So what happens when you have to get up early to go to work the next day?

What is Internet Addiction and Do I Have It?

The Center for Internet Addiction has published an online test to determine whether or not you suffer from internet addiction. For writers like us, however, where the internet is part of your job - how do you know there’s even a problem? Ultimately it comes down to the same criteria as alcohol. It’s not a problem until it’s a problem.

Some questions to ask:

  • Do you find that you’ve stayed up far later than you intended while working on the Internet, and does that happen often?
  • Do you neglect non-internet/family duties in order to spend more time on the Internet?
  • Do others often complain about how often you are on the computer?
  • Does your job or school work suffer because of the amount of time you’re online?
  • Do you need to check email obsessively?
  • Do you choose to go online rather than spend time with others?
  • Do you feel agitated or moody when offline, but relieved when you are back on the Internet?

Yes to just a few of these questions could signal a problem. Richard Kelly wrote a fantastic book titled Massively Multiplayer Online Role-Playing Games: The People, the Addiction and the Playing Experience that perfectly outlines why these virtual worlds, like the World of Warcraft, is so darn addictive.

Avoiding Internet Addiction

I personally suffered from this affliction since I was in high school. That was before the days of the Internet, and my addiction was the magical worlds of games like Sentinel Worlds (an old Electronic Arts space game) and Ultima. These addictions made it into my college life and incorporated the internet once that was
invented. Finally all of the above addictions integrated into my marriage where it became a problem.

I now work online, but I’ve recovered enough from this addiction so that I can recognize it and work to make sure that it remains under control. The most important thing you can do, especially if you are a web designer or Internet writer who makes a living from the Internet, is to set strict guidelines regarding your online time. Make it like a real day job, where you clock in, and clock out at specific times during the day. And once you clock out, you go home and do offline work, or just enjoy time with the kids and family. As Internet workers, there really is no difference between Internet addiction and workaholism, so stay vigilant and protect yourself. The last thing you need is to end up in the hospital like this poor 15 year old from Sweden who had to learn the hard way.

Get Cheap Cell Phones and Wireless Deals. | Thanks to Best Savings Accounts, CD Rates and UK Loan