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Writer in the Garret

~ A writer living one word at a time

Writer in the Garret

Category Archives: Uncategorized

Near the end-end

14 Thursday Jul 2016

Posted by Yvonne Montgomery in Uncategorized, Wisdom Court, Writing

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

plot elements, writing process

Portrait of crazy stressed young business woman screaming and pulling her hair over white background

No lick and a promise this time. I’ve sent All In Bad Time (Wisdom Court Book III) to beta readers for reactions and commentaries. Until I get feedback, I’m trying to clean up my work area and find and file all the scraps of paper decorating my study.
And how’s your summer going?

The problem with being sort of done with a book is the limbo left behind. I’m still thinking about plot points, still dreaming about scenes, and definitely still waiting to see what kind of comments I get. That’s the scariest part. During all the times I feel I was delusional to become a writer, I’m most convinced when I first show the tender shoots of my prose to someone else. (Can you tell I don’t work with a critique group?) Then I start dreaming about specific words to replace others, curse the plot points I didn’t stress in the “final” draft, and up the amount of antacid to deal with the ball of lead in my gut. Good times.

So, why do I continue to write? I have reasons, most psychiatric, but secretly I yearn for the moments when the world of my book gets several pieces from the universe, all at once. I love the joy of figuring out plot snarls, even as I peer over the edge of the abyss called Stuck In Space. I’m a total sucker for the rare and beautiful moments when characters talk and I just record what they say. I’ve never found any other way but writing to stumble into those highs.

Now, as I have to pretend I live in the real world, my hopes for you writers out there are these: may your words flow smoothly; may you enjoy your work in progress; may you finish with real satisfaction; and, of course, may your work hit the bestseller lists.

Cheers!

 

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Feed Your Head…said the White Rabbit

02 Tuesday Jun 2015

Posted by Yvonne Montgomery in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

               Colorado Mountains Silhouette During Summer Sunset. Mountains Sunset Scenery.

I just registered for Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers Colorado Gold Writing Conference, September 11-13, at The Westin Westminster. Checking through the list of panels and speakers made me happy.

Top-notch authors, editors, agents and make Colorado Gold one of the very best conferences in the country. We hermit-writers who spend most of our time muttering over plot points in rooms full of books will be able to hang with our own kind, meeting luminaries and not-there-yets. Tales will be told. Libations will be consumed. Fun will be had.

And don’t forget the pitch sessions and critiques with editors and agents. Sign up soon if you’re interested in showing your work to professionals. Those slots go fast.

If you’re interested, check out rmfw.org and get the details and deadlines. Attending the Gold is a great investment in your writing career.

I hope we’ll see each other there.

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Visual Shortcuts that Cut

29 Monday Sep 2014

Posted by Yvonne Montgomery in Uncategorized

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I like this blog post from Elle Hill. It’s a useful nudge to my imagination to put more character actors in starring roles. Thanks, Elle.

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Writers, writers…

04 Thursday Sep 2014

Posted by Yvonne Montgomery in Uncategorized, Writing

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Colorado Gold, RMFW, writers conference

…will be gathered starting tomorrow at the Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers annual Colorado Gold conference. They’ll come from all over the country to meet, greet, and share information about the maddening, wonderful profession of putting words together to express ideas, create characters, connect with the world. And I’ll be one of them.

Those of you scribblers who have never attended a writing conference might well consider doing so. I hid myself in my garret for years, swearing I’d not show any of  my writing to anyone until I made a sale. I learned how much I’d missed when I attended a Bouchercon mystery convention and discovered my tribe. I’d always thought I had several screws loose, and then I met other writers. We could hardly hear each other speak for the sound of all those rattling fasteners clanking in the room. I met authors who shared what they’d learned and were more than generous to unknowns like me.

The members of Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers continue in that tradition. I look forward to each September when I know I’ll be spending time with people who are as passionate as I am about getting those words on the page. We’ll share rueful stories about how hard writing is, and how crazy the publishing business is, and how much we still love what we do.

This year’s conference has sold out, which is a testament to its informative panels and opportunities to talk with editors, agents, and other writers. Start thinking about attending next year’s conference. (http://rmfw.org/) Regardless of where you are in the many stages of becoming a writer, you’ll be investing in a glorious celebration of the joy and the pain of writing.

I can’t wait for tomorrow.

 

P.S. Edge of the Shadow, Wisdom Court Book One and  A Signal Shown, Wisdom Court Book Two are available in paperback form at Amazon: http://amzn.to/1waXExa and http://amzn.to/1rOCuXj

And as paperbacks at B & N: Book One, http://bit.ly/1ouI35u and Book Two, http://bit.ly/1lBUn9v

The links for the ebooks are in the previous post.

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Check out my guest post!

24 Thursday Apr 2014

Posted by Yvonne Montgomery in Uncategorized

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Image

Today I’m guest posting on Patricia Stoltey’s blog. Come by and see!

 

“Talk Amongst Yourselves: Conversations with the Voices in My Head” by Yvonne Montgomery @authorYvonneM tinyurl.com/lcrj9vb

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10 Dialogue Tips To Make Your Novel Shine

05 Wednesday Mar 2014

Posted by Yvonne Montgomery in Uncategorized

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I’ve been working on making my characters’ dialogue more distinctive and honing their actions to make them more in the scene.
Here’s some wonderful advice for spiffing up dialogue from Shannon Donnelly on the Writers in the Storm blog. Great stuff.

writersinthestorm's avatarWriters In The Storm Blog

Dialogue_Photopin By Shannon Donnelly

Great dialogue can make or break a novel.

This view may stem from growing up watching a lot of 1930’s screwball comedies. Zingers fly with rapid fire and everyone talks. A lot. But the importance of dialogue really sank in when I wrote A Proper Mistress. I went for a lot of dialogue in that book and it went on to be one of my best selling romances.

We all know great dialogue when we read it—and the best dialogue seems effortless. But good dialogue takes work, sometimes needing multiple edits and thinking it over and totally revising a scene. It also takes a few key ingredients.

1) Give Your Characters Unique Voices.

Can you tell who is talking without any tags to make this obvious?

You have to get your characters talking in order to find their voices. And each character needs a distinct voice.

That…

View original post 1,071 more words

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Not done yet, but I’m thankful…

26 Tuesday Nov 2013

Posted by Yvonne Montgomery in Uncategorized

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good cheer, Thanksgiving, Writing

I said out loud I was aiming to complete A Signal Shown by the end of November. It’s not going to happen, but I’ve written a lot so all is not lost. Here goes another challenge: I’m aiming to finish it by the end of December, holidays or no holidaImageys.

As for the random viruses, crises, and have-tos of the season: can we coexist peacefully?

Congratulations to all the NaNoWriMo participants. I hope  you met your goals.

Happy Thanksgiving to one and all. I’m grateful to family and friends who not only support my endeavors, but also accept my disappearing for weeks (months!) at a time to tell myself stories.

Cheers!

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A Challenge to Writers

07 Monday Oct 2013

Posted by Yvonne Montgomery in Uncategorized

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This post is so inspiring, I have to share it with you. We all need to climb onto the motorcycle.

writersinthestorm's avatarWriters In The Storm Blog

Live to Ride – Write to Live

By Laura Drake

Most of you know me on some level – I am not an ‘old soul.’ Seriously. My method is to make every mistake possible until I finally bumble across the way that works for me. I was the one who hung back for decades, stuck in fear and my own opinions of myself.

What helped change that for me, was a motorcycle.

I rode 100,000 miles behind my husband on his motorcycle. Every vacation and three weekends out of four, we spent on two wheels. In the boring stretches, I’d prop a paperback on his back and read. Got some weird looks, but I loved it. I was content.

Then the Universe intervened. On our way home from a ten day vacation, at dusk outside Kingman Arizona, a dog ran in front of our bike. A big dog. I still…

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Book Beginnings: Plot threads, part one

12 Thursday Sep 2013

Posted by Yvonne Montgomery in e-books, Ghosts, Hauntings, Uncategorized, Writing

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

imagination, plot elements, writing process

997995-097For me a book begins with a kernel of an idea I need to explore.  My soon-to-be published e-book, Edge of the Shadow, sparked into life when I read an article about the MacArthur Awards, the genius grants.  Six accomplished individuals had been chosen to receive a healthy chunk of money, though I don’t remember exactly how much.  A hundred thousand? Two hundred thousand?  Whatever.  Point was, these people had been writing, creating, researching things the MacArthur Foundation considered interesting and worthy of encouragement.  No strings attached, no required reports of how the money was used, the foundation just gave them money.  I loved that idea.

Because I tend to write books with female protagonists, I thought how cool it would be to award similar grants to six not yet well-known women.  And because I’ve always liked what I call Grand Hotel books, (get a bunch of people in a place and observe their interactions, named after the movie of the same name), I decided to create a women’s institute where these characters could interact to their hearts’ content.  It eventually came to be called Wisdom Court, a play on the founder’s name–Wyntham–and its architecture–three structures with a fountain in the middle of a courtyard.

Then the characters started arriving, and they brought with them their luggage and back stories, and the details of the endeavors that had captured the attention of the Wisdom Court selection committee.  Noreen had recently retired from her job as the headmistress of a private girls school and was compiling a book of quotations strictly by women.  Dolores was a sculptor putting together an exhibition.  And the main protagonist, Andrea, was a forensic artist who wanted to paint.  (The others will get their due in another post.)

I liked the women, and the institute, which I placed in my home town, Boulder, Colorado.  But in my life the past and present dance together, and the story I wanted to tell myself had to include that element.  I wanted to know what would happen when a likeable, deserving woman had her chance to get what she really wanted but was stymied by a strange confluence of events.  What would happen if this wonderful institute was affected by the lingering traces of those who’d lived there before?  What if Wisdom Court was haunted?

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Must I think in metaphors?

25 Tuesday Sep 2012

Posted by Yvonne Montgomery in Grief, Life, trees, Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Apparently I must.

Yesterday came The Cutting of the Trees, an epic set into motion decades ago.  We moved into Victoria Turtleshell in 1973.  The old three-story house had stately elms  along the street, homes to birds and squirrels.  This was shortly before Dutch Elm Disease cut through Denver like a scythe.  We lost them all.

Sad but determined, we planted new trees: one each silver maple and Norway maple, a honey locust in front, a dwarf cherry in the west yard, and along the alley what we thought was a bing cherry tree.  Have I mentioned I was in my earth-mother stage, planning to can cherries, bake cherry pies, cherry Danish, cook cherry dumplings, crochet cherry antimacassars…well, you get the idea.

We bought the biggest trees we could afford and chipped in several more for the old lady next door.  Our block was forested once more, offering homes for the birds and squirrels.  After a few years the honey locust died (recalled fondly for the shelter it provided during a wild afternoon when a mother robin spread her wings over her eggs as she rode out the storm.)  We replaced it with a Russian Olive named Zoya.

Over the years we trimmed branches here and there and the trees grew bigger.  My vegetable garden gave way to shade-loving plants, and until recently (global warming!) we didn’t need any air conditioning downstairs because of that shade.  But the idiosyncratic  growth of the so-called bing cherry tree began to concern us. (Though it bloomed each year, it never bore fruit.)  By then we were calling it the Octopus Tree, though it had far more than eight branches spreading up to the roof and looming over the alley.  I often listened to birds gossiping outside my study window, and when I peeked between the slats of the blinds, I knew I worked in a tree house.

We trimmed some of the dead wood under the tree canopy several weeks ago, smug at how we’d been able to handle the problem.  While we were out to breakfast that Sunday, wind gusted through the neighborhood and half the tree fell beside the house.  No damage to anything else, no one hurt.  We’d unbalanced it enough to allow the big diseased branch–the tree house branch–to shift in that wind.  Then we could clearly see how other branches were draped over the cable and telephone wires.  We had to call the professionals.

And so they came and they cut.  They thinned out the two maples, enhancing the shapes of the trees.  They spruced up the cherry and the Russian Olive.  And they set about trimming the Octopus Tree.  The arborist gave us updates as he worked, lowering the cherry-picker to get our opinions as it became clear how much had to be cut.  It was a lot.  By the time he’d removed the branches from the cables, half the remaining tree was gone, but he left boughs to cup around the deck by the porch and a few more branches to reach toward the silver maple, meeting to form a smaller canopy over the sidewalk.  It’s rather like trees in Japanese prints, spare but beautiful–or spare and beautiful, take your pick.

By the way, when I asked the man who came to estimate the job if the Octopus Tree was actually a bing cherry, he examined it silently, then shook his head.  “I haven’t seen one in Denver for a long time, but I’m almost sure that’s an apricot tree.”  Our Bonsai Octopus.

The metaphor?  I’ve lived long enough to discern a pattern or two when I look back over the years.  For a long time we were accumulators, buying the house, filling it with children and pets and things.  We planted trees and flowers and bought computers and appliances and clothes and stuff.  Now the wind has shifted.  Our kids are grown and our grandchildren thunder through Victoria Turtleshell.  We’re clearing out stuff, giving away things other people can use.  We’re pruning the dead wood, letting sunshine in.

When I went outside this morning, I saw how much light shone on the corner rock garden, how different everything looks.  The birds were swooping around the newly open branches as they waited their turns at the feeder.

I think I’ll be able to grow more flowers come spring.

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Writing by Yvonne Montgomery is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 

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Goodreads

Wisdom Court Series

ghost, ghosts, ghost story, thriller, metaphysics, supernatural, women, dreams, accomplishments, opportunities, romance, friendship, dachshund, Boulder, Colorado, Victorian, shadows, creepy, shivers, book, good read,
ghost, ghosts, ghost story, thriller, metaphysics, supernatural, women, dreams, accomplishments, opportunities, romance, friendship, dachshund, Boulder, Colorado, Victorian, shadows, creepy, shivers,

Finny Mysteries

Mystery, women, murder, detective, amateur detective, romance, sexy cop, Denver, capitol hill, thrills, strong women, clues,
Mystery, women, murder, detective, amateur detective, romance, sexy cop, Denver, capitol hill, thrills, strong women, clues,

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