Showing posts with label #writinggoals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #writinggoals. Show all posts

Thursday, January 11, 2024

My Least Favorite Goal by Lynn Lovegreen

 


I don’t write traditional resolutions anymore, but I do give myself a personal watchword for the year. Last year’s was Time, as in think carefully about how I spend my time. This year, I’m thinking of Grace, as in a disposition to show kindness or compassion.

And I make writing/career goals. This year, my least favorite goal is updating my website.

 

I like my website (www.lynnlovegreen.com), and Wix makes it fairly easy to work with. I know authors are “supposed to” update or refresh their websites on a regular basis, and I agree it’s an excellent idea. Good so far. But the choices are overwhelming to me. Should I create a new theme, or does the old one still fit my author brand? Are the pages or sections in the best order? Should I drop one, or add another page? Or tweak my social media links? Where do I even start? 

 

I confess this is one of my 2023 goals that I dragged over to 2024. One of these days, I need to stop procrastinating and just dig into it. Right now, it’s on the to-do list. Maybe I’ll get around to it before the snow melts? 😉

 

Do you have any goals you keep putting off? Or do you have any website advice for me? Please drop a line in the comments.

 

Lynn Lovegreen has lived in Alaska for most of her life. After twenty years in the classroom, she retired to make more time for writing. She enjoys her friends and family, reading, and volunteering for her local library. Her young adult historical romance is set in Alaska, a great place for drama, romance, and independent characters. See her website at www.lynnlovegreen.com

 

 

 

Tuesday, August 15, 2023

Assessing the Year...Past the Midpoint ... by Delsora Lowe


I am obsessive about setting writing and writer-related goals every year. And for every year I have done so, I have made or surpassed my goals in most areas. I am predictably bad at keeping up on social media and my website. But I always make my writing word count for the year, including a high level (for me) writing goal for every February, when I join the New Jersey Romance Writer’s 30K challenge.

That’s right, thirty thousand words in twenty-eight days. We check in daily with our goals on a special loop and cheer each other on. It’s inspiring, but also, it’s the competition that drives me. Now, everyone who knows me well understands I am the least athletic person, and definitely not competitive. But for some reason, this competition calls to me. Not because I am trying to one-up others, but because I am trying to one-up myself by achieving a higher word count over the previous year. Plus, we get this cool virtual badge, AND… drum roll, a super cool pin. Okay, I know the word cool is not actually COOL anymore, but hey, I’m a 60s gal—the decade of my formative pre-teen and teen years.

This year, as we are now officially over the mid-point, and in reality, only have five months left to meet 2023 goal expectations, I must confess, I threw away—okay, a bit dramatic—I set aside purposely, my 2023 writing goals, which included finishing (this spring) my final edits on my third book in the Cowboys of Mineral Springs series. Instead, I took up a challenge for me—writing a legacy piece for not only myself, but to give to my two children for the holidays this year.

I figured easy-peasy, since it was based on ideas from the book, Elderwriters: Celebrate Your Life, by Sue Barocas, which encourages creative pieces about aspects of your life, lists of favorites, a bit about family, life’s motivations, etc. The author is free to write in any creative genre, including poetry, lists, essays, etc. It is not a linear telling of your life, but based on memories, important events, and any other topics and methods the writer wishes to employ. For example, I did a piece on my travels as a kid that took my family to Hong Kong, the far east, then up through the Suez, and on to European and African locations. Another piece focused on memories of historical events in my lifetime, such as where I was when I learned JFK had been assassinated in Dallas. The project was sponsored by Midcoast Literacy through People Plus, (a local activities center for 55 and over,) and I worked with a Bowdoin student intern who helped guide the project.

I wrote free-flowing poems. One was about my love of jazz and an intimate venue I used to go to on Sunday afternoons in Washington, D.C. to listen to local jazz musicians, including my former high school English teacher who is a drummer. He’s only about ten plus years older than me. And to say the entire female population of upper school wasn’t in crush mode way back when, is an understatement. But during my more seasoned years, when I went back to work at my old school in the early 2000’s, he and his wife became good friends of mine. I also wrote a free-flowing ode to my grand-pets, and an ode to embracing my curls (a polite way of referring to my frizzy hair, inherited from my dad’s side of the family.) I wrote essays of wisdom I learned from my grandmother, and memories of my mom’s best friend who was like a mother to me, honoring her support and wonderful meals over the years.

I did extensive research on my father’s family. Luckily, on my mom’s side there is an entire 424-page volume tracing our family back to the first settlers from Scotland in 1772, and reference to the famous Mohawk Indian Chief, Joseph Brant, who had been befriended by my great, great, great, great, great grandparents, John and Betty More, during the Revolutionary War period. He warned them of an impending raid, and they and their eight children were able to escape. I am related to the seventh child, David. So, without the help of the Chief, I wouldn’t be here today.

I also wrote a lovely piece about my Aunt Virginia, married to my mom’s older brother, John. She was a WASP (Women Airforce Service Pilot,) during WWII as a civilian ferry pilot, and was one of the first women to ever pilot planes for the US military. She is now part of an exhibit for the Air and Space Museum, part of the Smithsonian. In her later years she was a founding member of Veterans for Peace, founded in Maine in 1985, and helped get recognition for their contribution, in order to receive military benefits for the WASPs or their families, as many died in the line of duty. Uncle John, too, served in the war, and although never verified, we surmise from his knowledge of several languages and his assigned posts, that he may have done a bit of spying.

So, back to goals, and the reason for my procrastination. I have revised my goals. After taking time to breath for the last few weeks of July, while family visited and I refused to open my computer for a week, I am now thinking about finishing my final edits of Rescuing the Sheriff, and thinking about booking my editor for two rounds of edits, working with my cover artist, and writing the dreaded back cover copy, and refining the blurb in order to upload to various sales venues. And... And... And...I may be a bit late in releasing, since I had hoped to get this book and another book out this year. The good news is, I actually wrote a draft of a blurb and tag lines for the second book. Life happens…and I have decided to not obsess about missing my self-imposed 2023 timelines. Plus, I am still on-track with my annual word count goal, and I have released print versions of two e-books released in the last two years. And…drum roll…I still have four-and-a-half months to catch up.


Do you set annual goals?
And do you stress over meeting them?
Or do you readjust during the year?




~ cottages to cabins ~ keep the home fires burning ~

Delsora Lowe writes small town sweet and spicy romances and contemporary westerns, from the mountains of Colorado to the shores of Maine.

Author of the Starlight Grille series, Serenity Harbor Maine novellas, and the Cowboys of Mineral Springs series, Lowe has also authored short romances for Woman’s World magazine. The Love Left Behind is a Hartford Estates, R.I. wedding novella. A Christmas novel (The Inn at Gooseneck Lane) and novella (Holiday Hitchhiker) were released in late fall 2022. Look for book 3 of the cowboy’s series, as well as book 2 of the Hartford Estates series, in 2024.

 

Social Media Links:
Author website
:
www.delsoralowe.com
Facebook Author page:
https://www.facebook.com/delsoraloweauthor/community/
Amazon Author page:
https://www.amazon.com/Delsora-Lowe/e/B01M61OM39/ref=ntt_dp_epwbk_0
Books2Read Author page:
https://www.books2read.com/ap/8GWm98/Delsora-Lowe
BookBub Author Page:
https://www.bookbub.com/authors/delsora-lowe-93c6987f-129d-483d-9f5a-abe603876518
Goodreads Author Page:
https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/16045986.Delsora_Lowe
Instagram: #delsoralowe / https://www.instagram.com/delsoralowe/

 


Monday, August 7, 2023

Evaluating my Year by Paty Jager



It's that time of year to start evaluating if I need to change up my goals or if I'm on track with what I'd decided in December of last year. 

First here is a list of the goals I'd set for 2023. 

Professional
Release 2 Hawke books- Bear Stalker is written, will write #11 Damning Firefly
Release 2 Spotted Pony Casino Books = The Squeeze and The Pinch 
Hawke ebook box set of books 7-9
Spotted Pony Casino box set of books 1-3 
Get caught up on the Hawke large print books
Catch up on the Shandra Higheagle audiobooks. 
working on promoting my audiobooks. 
Personal: 
Continue walking 5 days a week 
Watch my carb and fat intake 
Travel 
Keep up my personal blog 
Do more horseback riding

Here is where I am at:
Professional: 
I released Bear Stalker and will release Damning Firefly on September 15th. 
The Squeeze was published, and I still need to write The Pinch.
Both the Gabriel Hawke and Spotted Pony Casino ebook box sets have been released.
I am caught up on large print books for the Gabriel Hawke series.
We are working on 14th audiobook in the Shandra Higheagle Mysteries, with only one more to go to finish the series. 
Promoting audiobooks, I've done horrid at. I can't seem to find the time to dig in and get out the ads and schmooze with audiobook listeners. I REALLY need to work on this harder going forward. 
Personal: 
Most weeks I do get in at least 5 days of walking, more times than not I get in 6-7 days. 
I am on the keto diet and have lost 12 pounds. I'd like to lose 10 more to feel at my best. 
I have traveled some this year and have a trip set for this month to Hawaii. I'm going with one of my best friends and we are going to chill and relax and enjoy. We went to Alaska for a week for our Grandson's graduation and wedding. And I have attended a powwow and gone on a couple of research trips. You can find out about those at my blog Writing into the Sunset.
This brings me to keeping up my personal blog. I have been doing a pretty good job. I post twice a month with all different types of things. Some writing related and some my life. 
My gelding Jan (John in Dutch)
As for horseback riding...my gelding didn't come out of the winter in good shape. I've been slowly getting him to look like he can carry me for a ride. A granddaughter used him for a 4-H horse camp and I plan to get on him before you read this post. 

I believe I'm on track to attain my goals. I did slip in a short story for the Windtree Press anthology releasing in October and I decided to write a Christmas novella to give my readers closure on the Shandra Higheagle Mystery series. My goal is to have that finished by the end of August and get started on The Pinch, book 5, in the Spotted Pony Casino series. 

And in between all of that, I have my trip to Hawaii, two several-day events I'll be working at the NIWA booth, and I'm attending a conference in November to help me do better at marketing. i.e., get those audiobooks selling. 

My evaluation is I am not nearly as behind this year as I have been the past two years. This makes me happy because I'm hoping to put together a month-long trip next year and want to make sure I can do it without messing up too much of my output. More on that in another post. 
 

Paty Jager is an award-winning author of 54 novels, 8 novellas, and numerous anthologies of murder mystery and western romance. All her work has Western or Native American elements in them along with hints of humor and engaging characters. Paty and her husband raise alfalfa hay in rural eastern Oregon. Riding horses and battling rattlesnakes, she not only writes the western lifestyle, she lives it. This is what Books a Plenty Book Reviews has to say about the Gabriel Hawke series: "The blend of nature tracking, clues, and the animals makes for a fascinating mystery that is hard to put down."

Tuesday, August 1, 2023

Goals – love ‘em & hate ‘em

I love setting goals. Many years ago, I was introduced to Sarra Cannon’s HB90 goal setting system with the worksheets, calendars, Kanban boards – the whole nine yards. Finally, setting achievable goals and having a system to track progress made sense! I was ready to conquer the world! Or at least my little corner of it.

If you’re not familiar with Sarra’s dreamchild, you can find all sorts of info on her website and on YouTube. (I'm in no way affiliated with Sarra. I just really appreciate all that she's shared and taught over the years.) 

In a very tiny nutshell, you focus on one quarter of the year at a time and figure out how many actual writing days you anticipate having in those three months, being super realistic. You may think you have 90 days to write, but there’s more to life than writing, like appointments, family members who need attention or care, social commitments, etc. Subtract that time from the 90. And then there are the unforeseen things like not feeling well, or the water heater springs a leak, or the cat runs away. You get the idea. Subtract a few more days for that stuff. I take weekends off, so I automatically lose eight to ten days. Now, given that you know how many words you can write in a day (and if you don’t know you need to find out), and you now know how many actual writing days you have, you can do the simple math to see how many words you can write in a quarter. Or, if you’re editing, you can work backward. 

I have a deadline. My editor is expecting a polished manuscript by September 30th. My extremely rough draft is 70,000 words. Between now and then I have a week-long camping trip scheduled, a long weekend to celebrate our anniversary, two doctor appointments with my mum in another town so each one requires a full day, and I can count on at least three days of downtime due to a migraine. (Insert sound of old-fashioned adding machine.) Leaving me with 33 days for editing at a rate of 8 pages a day. Definitely doable, even factoring in the scene or three *cough* that need fleshing out. 

You gotta love it, right? So where is the hate ‘em as referenced in the title of this post? Well, I’ll tell you. Because I had the second quarter of the year laid out in a similar fashion and then my mum got ill, requiring me to live with her for weeks at a time and provide hands-on nursing care. Also, we both got Covid. (Mild cases, but still!) My muse left the building. I got some writing admin done, promo and such, but anything creative was a lost cause. Mum is recovering nicely, thank goodness, (Thank you Dr. L and Dr. C!) and I’m back home. Nothing I had planned to accomplish in Q2 got done. I look at my planner and feel like I’m too behind schedule to ever catch up. And that’s probably true. But there’s lots of time left in the year. I recalibrated and know that I can finish Q3 strong. Then I’ll set some goals for Q4, count the days and do the math. And I’ll add in a few extra days of non-writing just to be safe.


Luanna Stewart has been creating adventures for her imaginary friends since childhood. She spends her days writing many flavours of romance. When not torturing her characters, she’s in her kitchen baking something delicious. She lives in Nova Scotia with her patient husband and two hens. 


Monday, December 5, 2022

How the Year Wore me Down by Paty Jager


2022 is ending and for the first time since I began self-publishing, I didn't write as many books as I'd set up as my goal. 

To say this year was a failure doesn't fit. 

But I can say, I have never had such a disjointed year since becoming an author as I did in 2022.

I started out with the goal of writing 2 Gabriel Hawke books and 2 Spotted Pony Casino books and my short story for the Crime Never Takes a Holiday anthology. I also planned a research trip to Montana and my usual two book-selling trips to Sumpter OR Flea Market.

What I didn't factor in was having our high school graduating granddaughter living with us. She participated in volleyball and track. I went to all her games and meets.

My monthly trips to visit my dad stopped in May, when he passed. 

Then a trip to CA to attend a memorial for one of my mom's cousins, a family we were close with when my brothers and I were young.


And I needed to make two trips to the coast, one to get a writing project done and the other to spend time with family, not to mention a family reunion and my dad's memorial thrown in the mix. 

Then as fall approached and I thought, "Now I can settle in and get writing done," I signed up to help sell books at events 6 hours from where I live. That meant a day to get there, however many days I helped at the events, and a day home. No writing. 

I just last week finished a book that was to be published by now. Now it won't be published until January. which starts 2023 off already behind on my "perceived" schedule. 

The good thing about being self-published is that I set my publishing dates. So the only person I'm disappointing is myself. And I do a really good job of beating myself up. 

So, knowing already that I plan to attend the Sumpter Flea, several of the NIWA book events, my book tour with Dwight Holing in May, two weeks in Hawaii with two of my best friends in August, and a trip to Alaska to attend a grandson's graduation, I have pared back my usual expectations for 2023 goals. 

I don't want to feel like I'm behind most of the year like I did all of 2022.  I would like some wiggle room to work on another project I hinted at to some readers and they were very receptive. When I see an opening in my schedule to work on the project, I'll tell you more about it. 

For now, I just want to say, I wish you all a wonderful Holiday Season and a prosperous and happy New Year!



Paty Jager is an award-winning author of 50+ novels, 8 novellas, and numerous anthologies of murder mystery and western romance. All her work has Western or Native American elements in them along with hints of humor and engaging characters. Paty and her husband raise alfalfa hay in rural eastern Oregon. 

Blog / WebsiteFacebook / Paty's Posse / Goodreads / Pinterest   / Bookbub

/ Instagram / TikTok / Findaway Voices




Tuesday, January 11, 2022

I Could Write a Book by Eleri Grace

 


What's new for you in 2022? 







Well, as my title says, hopefully I'll write a(nother) book! 


The tune from Rodgers and Hammerstein's 1940 hit "Pal Joey" is a love song of course, but a few lines from the lyrics speak to my mindset:

But my busy mind is burning to use what learning I've got
I won't waste any time
I'll strike while the iron is hot

Those are my hopes for 2022: not wasting time and striking while the iron is hot so to speak. 

Maybe I would have developed writer's block anyway, who knows, but I can conveniently blame Covid-19 and its destructive siblings Alpha, Delta, and Omicron for my lack of output and motivation over much of 2020 and 2021. 

I'm once again using the Cultivate What Matters goal-setting system. Even though I wasn't filling out all the reflection work each month or quarter as the system urges one to do, I bought it again this year because my goals I had set were always in my mind, even if I wasn't always faithful about recording it all. My goals for 2022 are more similar to 2021 than not. This could be read as an indication that I failed 2021, that I didn't accomplish all that much. But the truth is that some of my goals don't lend themselves to being checked off or completed in full over the course of a single year. 

The one writing goal that could have been completed but wasn't is the publication of my third full Clubmobile Girls novel. My intention is to finish and publish it this year, come what may. But I'm celebrating that I learned how to write a novelette and published it in 2021 (and I now have the barebones start on 3 other novelettes to complete a quartet of stories). I've also got new branding in the form of new cover-art that will be released this year. I'm waiting until I can reveal the cover for Book 3 before then announcing the new cover-art for my first 2 novels -- but truthfully I'm so excited by the new look of my covers that I may not wait much longer. My hope is that these new covers will speak to a wider network of readers as they are more in keeping with the look and feel of other WWII fiction released in the last couple of years. Watch my social media and blog for my new cover-art reveals in the coming months! 

My goals for 2022 are varied, as Cultivate What Matters encourages people to evaluate many facets of their personal, working, and leisure lives. Whatever your goals are for 2022, I hope you find joy, peace, fulfillment, and pride in all that you do!


You can find my Clubmobile Girls series on Amazon. Learn more about me on my website, or on my social media accounts through Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Pinterest


Tuesday, April 14, 2020

A Teaser Chapter You Say?

I am excited to report that I’m currently putting the final touches on the second novel in my Clubmobile Girls series (look for a cover reveal on Diary of an Eccentric: Writings of an Eccentric Bookworm next week and on my social media thereafter).
So while many of us are experiencing trouble summoning our creative muse or focusing generally (count me in both camps), the tedium of inputting line edits provided the perfect (and productive) distraction from the news and my worries. I received my line edits in late February just as everyday life began to shut down for many of us. Aha! Line edits: this I can focus on. With far less to do in my other lines of work than typical, I was able to turn those edits back to my editor much more quickly than might have been normally the case, and now I’m putting in the final round of line edits/copyedits.
Wonderful, right? Well, this past week, I dusted off the various components of front matter and back matter Word documents from my first novel so they would be ready to go with the manuscript to my formatter this week. Publication pages for both print and e-book, a dedication page, a quotation page, reviews/praise for the first book, the call to action (plea for reviews/ratings), the author’s historical note, the acknowledgments section . . . and then, I realized what I did not have at all: a teaser chapter for the next book in the series. Oops.
I spent a few days convinced that I could dash off at least a first scene, if not a full-fledged chapter. I know the third book will take place in India! But, no, wait, it might end up being in Burma. Okay, but if the heroine arrives in early 1943, she won’t go straight to Burma, which was then under Japanese control, so I can still show her arrival in India. Sure, that seems reasonable. So, will I open with her stepping off the ship into the steamy streets of Bombay? Wait, did the troopships dock in Bombay at all or only Karachi or Calcutta? I don’t know. The back-and-forth with myself, as I say, went on for a couple of days last week.  
Panic eventually gave way to reason. I’m not going to have a teaser chapter by next week (or even by next month when the book officially releases), and I just have to make my peace with that. Rather than hastily throwing something together that might ultimately have to be scrapped entirely, I think it makes more sense to just eliminate that stress from my writing life in these trying times.
I may write a short note to my readers explaining that I spend several months reading widely and deeply about the theater of the war in which my novel will be set before I begin any writing at all. I have read all the available Red Cross Girl memoirs from the China-Burma-India (CBI) Theater, but I now will turn to exploring online oral histories that will shed more light on the experiences of the ARC staff in these remote and challenging locations. And I’ve truly only begun the reading that will bear on the hero’s story.  So . . . no teaser chapter.
As many of us are noting on this blog, this is a good time to simply be kind to yourself and to others around you. We’re all dealing with much more than the ordinary stress, so there’s no point making things worse on that score. I hope all of you are taking time to get some fresh air each day, relax as you can, and spend time with your family and friends, whether physically in your household or virtually. Take care everyone!



Learn more about me and my writing on my website, and you can also find me on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and Instagram. Remember, you can check these sites later next week to see the cover and read the sales blurb for my second novel in the series.

You can purchase my debut novel through the links below.
Amazon US  ~  Amazon UK  ~  Amazon CA  ~  Amazon AU  Google ~ Nook  ~ Kobo


Tuesday, October 3, 2017

Starting The Fall Season In London

by Michelle Monkou

Home Away From Home
Life comes at you fast. This year, my life seems to follow that sentiment as it zooms by on jet packs.

As the Fall season rolls in with much bluster and its crisp mornings, I had the pleasure of sitting at a London café enjoying a latte. I’m here in my birthplace supporting my daughter’s bid to get her master’s. My stay is a brief one, but I’m making every minute count.

Beyond navigating the bureaucratic hoops of international student status, the focus of my visit is to recharge the creative batteries, refill the reservoir, and get the writing juices flowing.

Dinner at my hotel
Long walks are part of my daily routine. As I get familiar with my surroundings, I’m inclined to explore the various side streets and neighborhoods enjoying the restaurants and coffee shops. And as I wander past the older homes, I imagine the families, servants, and the array of visitors that may have walked through the rooms. Who were they? What did they do? How did they see their London life?

Of course, in a place that celebrates history, museums are not in short supply. On previous visits, I did go to many galleries and museums, much to my family’s dismay. This time since I’m pretty much on my own time, I have visited the British Museum and had the pleasure to linger and soak up the various exhibits. While I see the various cultures and the related histories, I think about the stories that I can craft from what I have learned. There is so much to take in of our world, both past and the present.

While most of these activities take place during the day, the best part of London is at night. I absolutely enjoy walking through the quieter part of the day when offices are closed, some retailers are winding down, and the hectic rush hour traffic has shifted to the dinner or theater crowd. There is certain beauty with all the colorful city lights and the occasional sightings of the double deckers. And there is a serene elegance to the many monuments and statues that celebrate British life and history.

Although my visit isn’t over, I feel the stirrings of the creative need to journal and take down my feelings and insights about this trip. There is much more for me to enjoy as I head off to Yorkshire as the next part of this U.K. trip.


Cheers!