Monday, June 29, 2009
Tess' Top 5 Things She Learned
I sat all alone on a mountainside for four days and here are the top five things I learned:
ONE: That hottie ski instructor at the swanky resort in the winter is the same unemployed bum sitting on the condo step smoking a joint in the summer. Not so hot.
TWO: I live in one of the most beautiful places in the world.
THREE: When I sit down and force myself to write for 8 hours straight, nothing but trash comes from my pen for the last two and a half hours. Unsalvageable, unredeemable trash. Good to know.
FOUR: On the flip side, those first five and a half hours produce fairly decent stuff. Turns out, I have some pretty cool ideas when my mind is left alone to wander....completely uninterrupted and free from mommy-guilt. Who knew?
FIVE: I love my blogging friends. I love checking in on you, seeing what you are learning and thinking. I love hearing from you in the comments section. There was no Internet access at my mountain condo and I missed you guys!
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Wednesday, June 24, 2009
I'm Taking This With Me

WIP Wednesday
I am working on a contemporary novel (still Middle Grade), as yet untitled, and it has been so much fun. My last work was historical and included vast amounts of research. Hooray for less research!So, on this sunny Wednesday, I thought I'd leave a snippit from the start of the novel. I am only on page 10 of this work, but I have a personal writing retreat planned for this coming weekend and hope to get lots of good writing behind me.
Forgive the lousy formatting. I blame it all on blogger.
Jade pulled aside the living room curtain and peered out into her
backyard. “He’s digging again.”
“Leave your brother alone,” her mother said without turning away from the television program. Drew Carey’s The Price Is Right was on, which happened to be her mother’s favorite show. Jade’s mother could name the price of just about anything – from a round tin of Turtle Wax to a brand new sailboat. Jade thought it was the weirdest thing for her mother to know, given the fact that she hadn’t held down a steady job in Jade’s living memory. Shopping - for car wax or sailboats - required money they did not have.
“I’m not doing anything,” Jade said.
Her mother raised a single eyebrow.
“I’m not,” she insisted further. “He could dig to China, for all I care.”
“Four eighty-nine!” Her mother hollered at the program. “Four eighty-nine, everyone knows the price of that detergent!” She threw her arms up in disgust. “Idiots!"
The newest of Drew’s Beauties flipped over a little square below the box of detergent. Black letters showed the price - $4.89.
By her mother’s imaginary account, she had won exactly twenty seven showcase showdowns on The Price is Right. She also claimed winning two trips to Europe, nineteen braaand new cars and even a his and hers set of motor scooters.
Jade turned back to the window. Her brother Paul was chest deep in a hole and digging deeper all the time. His long, jet hair clung to his cheeks in sweaty strands and the black eyeliner he wore was smudged and streaked. He looked up for a moment and caught his little sister’s gaze.
She quickly dropped the curtain.
Monday, June 22, 2009
Say It With Me
I left the first ten pages of my new WIP on the kitchen table last night. I printed it out to do a little review and revision.
This morning, when I woke up, it was still on the kitchen table, but now it had pen marks scribbled across the top.
How's that for a mantra? Say it with me, "I am good. I can be awesome. I think I will."
What's your mantra?
Saturday, June 20, 2009
Cut Yourself Some Slack
Let's cut ourselves some slack
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Looking Back and Laughing at My Idiocy....
Today I'll share an experience from years ago that I can now laugh at
Travel with me back to 2003
I'm at a fantastic and exciting SCBWI conference - the big one in LA with lots of fantastic authors and agents and editors.
At this conference, I had signed up for a manuscript critique and was assigned to a fantastic up and coming agent.
Agent: So, Tess, tell me about your novel
Me: *blabbers on about novel*
Agent: Is it completed?
Me: Not quite, it's about half way there.
Agent: (looking at pages), so the book is only going to be 74 pages long?
Me: ummm, no. I guess not.
Agent: No, I guess not. Alright, these pages have a very familiar feel to them.
Me: (blushing with pride) thank you!
Agent: (pulls wierd look on face) Umm, you're welcome.
Critique session ends and I walk around like a peacock feeling so proud of myself. Sure, I made a bit of a foolish remark when I said the book was half done....how many pages should a novel be anyway? But, still, he said my work had a familiar feel. Like it was timeless and wonderful and brilliant.
Agent: "As agents, we are looking for something fresh and original. We don't want anything familiar or played."
Me: *sitting in back of room* oh crud. By familiar, he means played.
No wonder he had that weird look on his face when I beamed and said, "thank you"
sometimes my idiocy amazes even me
I hope I've learned a little over these past six years. I think I have, thanks to my fantastic writerly friends (like you) who have shared critique, information, insight and encouragement.
Here is my point:
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Tuesday, June 16, 2009
You can be a Super Hero, too
I don't know about your family....but mine always thinks I'm amazing if I surprise them at dinner or during a daytime lull with a great new joke.
A ventriloquist is performing his act on stage and tells a dumb blond joke
A blond woman in the front row jumps up and says, "That's not fair! The color of my hair has nothing to do with my intelligence!"
Embarrassed, the ventriloquist begins to stammer out an apology
To which the blond woman says, "You keep out of this. I'm talking to that little jerk on your knee!"
hahahahahahahahahhahahahahahahaha
Have a happy week, all. It's beautiful summer!
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Sunday, June 14, 2009
Everyone is a Winner!
Well, not everyone technically. But one lucky comment-or will get my copy of The Invisible Wall by Harry Bernstein.
Here she is in all her cuteness next to the hat full of names.
Danyelle!
You can check out Danyelle's lyrical and creative blog MythTakes through this link.
Danyelle - e mail your mailing address to me at tesshilmo(at)comcast(dot)net and I'll pop the book in the mail. Congrats!
question for you: what is your favorite part of blogging???
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Thursday, June 11, 2009
Free Stuff Friday
Welcome to another Free Stuff Friday!
Today I'm giving away a copy of the fabulous book:

The Invisible Wall, By Harry Bernstein.
I wrote a post about this great book this week, click here to review it.
Important Note: The book is my copy that I want to give to a blogging friend. It is not brand new, but the only mark is when I wrote my name on the inside cover when I lent it out. It's yours to keep so you can just put a sticker with your name right over mine :)
What you have to do to enter:
A few weeks back, I wrote a post about how we must overcome walls as writers. If you want to see that post, click here.
Leave a comment with one 'wall' you've had to overcome. It can be a one word comment like, 'time' or you can share an experience....whatever you want to say!
Comments welcome from now through Sunday afternoon when I will pull all the comment-ors into a hat and draw one lucky winner out.
Good Luck and Happy Weekend!
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Tuesday, June 9, 2009
Fabulous New Writing Tip
This is one area of writing that I struggle with. A few ideas jump into my head perfectly formed, but most come to me in bits and drabs and need a lot of work.
I have great characters (my little opinion)
I have a perfect setting (it just changed, but I'm super happy with it now)
It's just the plot idea issue......
ugh.
I have finally worked it out and am really happy with the new plot line on my WIP, but it was a TON of work and I can't help wonder if there is an easier way.
different tabs - character, setting, plot, quirks
a bunch of clear sheet protectors in each tabbed section - so it will be easy to just slide a piece of paper or note or picture in each section.
Then, when I am reading the newspaper/magazines or surfing online or talking to a friend and an idea comes my way, I'll rip it out or jot it down and slide it into one of those pre-sectioned sheet protectors.
Sunday, June 7, 2009
More than just a Book Review - The Invisible Wall
There is so much to like about this book. It is a memoir written by harry Bernstein -- a 93 year old man.
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You read that right, he wrote this amazing and lyrical novel at 93.
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It is the story of his family and growing up Jewish during WW1. It is replete with interesting and heart breaking experiences that will keep you reading long into the night. I'd call it a must read.
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One of the reasons I love it so much has nothing to do with the actual book.
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Thursday, June 4, 2009
God can not steer a parked car
I grew up in a quirky household - surrounded by interesting, quirky people. Of course, I'm completely normal and not quirky in the least.
Stop laughing, it's true.
God can not steer a parked car.

Don't be afraid to take on that new project and let your muse lead you in a fresh and different direction. When you feel stale with one project, turn to another. When you finish a piece of work...put your nose to the grindstone and figure out your next step.
Interesting experience:
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Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Sucky Endings
I'm plotting.
I know, sympathies accepted.
Anyway...in the drudgery of the outlining phase, I dug through old notebooks and came across a really fantastic set of notes I took on
Here's what not to write:
Duh: an ending that's obvious to everyone but the MC (the shadowy figure with the bad breath that the MC keeps ignoring)
Over-the-top: an ending with an overdose of drama or violence (the MC holds everyone at bay with a machine gun)
Spill all: Think Scooby Doo. The antagonist, for no apparent reason, begins to talk-talk-talk
And then I woke up: an ending that suggests the rest of the book is a dream or didn't really happen
Out of sight: the all important ending confrontation happens off stage
But, but, but: the ending fails to tie up all the loose ends and explain why things happened.
Yeah, right: the ending leaves the reader having to assume that some key part of what happened was due to coincidence
Let me start by saying I hope I don't do these any longer...but I have in years past been guilty of: out of sight, duh and spill all. I think I've learned...but it's always good to have a reminder.
Question: I know you'd never do it now, but have you ever committed any of these ending crimes in your early writing years? Have you read books with disappointing edgings? What was it about the ending that made it so?
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Tuesday, June 2, 2009
Guess Who I Lunched With?
Monday, June 1, 2009
What is Middle Grade?
I tried to answer the question, What is Middle Grade Fiction? over at the Literary Lab.
Link over and check it out.
really. do it.
seriously - go for it.
I sometimes get weary of people saying, "I like your book, but it doesn't seem right for the YA market."
Well, guess what?? It's not for the YA market. It's MG. There is a difference.
ok, that bit of sassy commentary was fun.
thanks for putting up with me, folks - I'm off the soapbox now.
