Just wanted to let everyone know that my book THE EXORCIST’S APPRENTICE will be on sale for .99 on Kindle from Dec. 29 2015 to Jan. 5 2016.
I hope everyone had a great holiday and I hope you have a Happy New Year.
Just wanted to let everyone know that my book THE EXORCIST’S APPRENTICE will be on sale for .99 on Kindle from Dec. 29 2015 to Jan. 5 2016.
I hope everyone had a great holiday and I hope you have a Happy New Year.
Sometimes it’s difficult to get hours of writing in each day, especially if you work full time or have a busy family and/or social life. But it’s important to try to get as much writing done as you can if you want to be a writer. Writing is a muscle that needs to be exercised often so it can not only remain strong, but get stronger.
I admit that I don’t write every day. There … it’s out in the open now. Sometimes I’ll go a week or more without working on a first draft or any other project. But in that time I’m usually doing something constructive like editing/re-reading a draft, promoting a book on sale, engaging in social media, outlining a project or jotting down notes, research, etc. I don’t write every day – I write more in spurts. Like I said above, I may go weeks sometimes without writing, but then I’ll write eighty to a hundred pages in a few days (I just want to say here that I’ve never gone more than a month without writing something).
I’ve tried to create a writing schedule for myself many times, and it works for a little while, but then I’m usually back to my regular routine of not writing for a while and then writing at a furious pace for a few days. I’ve tried in the past to give myself page counts and word counts that I want to get done, or I’ll give myself a time limit of when I want to complete a first draft. But these don’t always work.
I read somewhere that one writer gives himself only four pages a day to write. Four pages? That’s nothing. But then I thought about it … if you write four pages a day times seven days a week, then in nine weeks you’d have a little over two hundred and fifty pages. Not too bad … a novel-length work in a little over two months.
Lately, I’ve found something even more extreme than that; I read about a writer who gives himself one page a day to complete. ONE PAGE? That’s ridiculous. Isn’t it?
Maybe not.
I tried it. I told myself that surely I can find some time in each day to write one page. So I committed myself to it. And to my surprise, I found that I never wrote only one page – that one page ended up becoming three or four pages, sometimes ten or fifteen pages.
So the one page a day thing has worked out well up until a few weeks ago. I had to rewrite a screenplay and send it to a producer so that bit into a lot of my time and some other things came up. I still got some writing done here and there, but I strayed away from the one-page-a-day routine.
But I’m going to go back to it right after Thanksgiving.
So my advice is: Don’t put too much pressure on yourself to write every day. If you put it off for a little bit, just make sure you get back to it. Don’t make yourself feel guilty about it, and definitely don’t throw in the towel because of it. And maybe try a writing schedule – even if it’s only one page a day. Maybe that one page will turn into more pages every day.
The main thing is that a writer writes. A writer gets to work pounding out the pages on whatever schedule he or she uses, and powers through the tough spots in the story until that first draft is written.
Hope this helps someone out there, and please feel free to comment if you want to.
Until next time …
Just wanted to let everyone know that almost all of my books will be on sale for .99 cents on Kindle for this Halloween week.
Please feel free to share.
http://www.amazon.com/Mark-Lukens/e/B00G8GYUUG
I will post or share a new article soon!
I came across another article about writing. The weird thing is that I started using some variations of these tips (before I read this article) over the last few weeks and they’ve been working for me.
Here’s the link:
http://writerswrite.co.za/how-to-defeat-the-dreaded-blank-page
Out of these tips listed in the article, the ones I’ve been using are:
This article also offers a list of prompts at the end to kind of experiment with stories and flex your writing muscles. I’ve never used prompts like this, but if it works for you then great! One thing I don’t have a problem with is coming up with ideas for stories, novels, or scripts. I have more ideas than I have time to write.
In the next few posts I’ll talk about where ideas come from (at least for me), and I’ll talk about the importance of jotting down ideas in a notebook and the importance of outlining.
Hope this article helps someone and please feel free to share.
Until next time …
Just wanted to let everyone know that one of my books is on sale for .99 cents until Oct. 16th – only on Kindle:
NIGHT TERRORS: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00M66IU3U
How do you hide from a psychic serial killer? That’s just what Tara must do as the man who slaughtered her family years ago has found her. Tara, who has psychic abilities of her own, won’t run away again … this time she’ll fight back.
Please feel free to spread the word and share! I’m going to try to have all of my books on sale for .99 cents at the same time closer to Halloween.
I’ll post another article or share one real soon,
Until then …
To get ready for the Halloween season, I decided to construct a list of the best horror films. I Googled away and found twenty different lists ranging from 11 Top 10 lists, 2 top 25 lists and 1 of each: top 12, top13, top 15, top 20, top 26, top 31, and one was even a top 50 list of the best horror films (and you’ll see a lot of one-vote films that came from these longer lists).
I wrote down the 20 lists and added up the number of times a film was listed, and then I came up with an overall list of the best horror films. Now I’m not saying that this is an all-encompassing list; I’m sure there are some great horror films left off (and I would like to hear your thoughts about that). Below, I list them in order from most votes (17 votes from these 20 lists, on down to 1 vote films) down to the least votes.
And after this list, I’m including my own list of best horror films/my favorites. I hope you’ll enjoy, and please feel free to comment with your favorite film or films for the Halloween season.
LIST OF BEST HORROR FILMS
The next list all received 2 votes each on these twenty lists I looked up:
It, Rec (Spanish version), An American Werewolf in London, Insidious, Sinister, Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1976), Seven, Jacob’s Ladder, The Orphanage (Spanish version), The Birds, The Cabin in the Woods, Ju-On (Korean), Last House on the Left (2009), The Descent, Suspiria, The Changeling (1980), The Mist, Les Diaboliques (French).
And these next films all were listed once somewhere on the twenty lists:
The Babadook, The Hills Have Eyes (1977), The Crazies (2010), Cujo, The Beyond, Frailty, The Stepfather (1987), Martin (1977), Bug, Candyman, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (not sure why this was on one of the lists), Black Swan (not sure why this one was on the list either), Cube (TV film), The Host, Coraline, Grave Encounters, The Exorcism of Emily Rose, Mirrors, In the Mouth of Madness, The Devil’s Backbone (Spanish), The Brood, Deliverance, Wolf Creek, Evil Dead II, The Mummy (not sure of which year), Scream, The Others, World War Z, Phantasm, The Wicker Man (1973), Don’t Look Now, When A Stranger Calls (1979), Fire in the Sky, Silent Night Deadly Night, Pet Sematary, 1408, ‘Salem’s Lot (TV movie 1979), Trick R Treat, Child’s Play, Dark Water (Korean 2002), House of Wax (not sure which one 1955 or 2005), The Innocents, Interview with a Vampire, Les Vampires, The Cabinet of Dr. Caligeri, Peeping Tom, Vampyre, Dead of Night, Audition, Eyes without a Face, What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?
Well, that’s the whole list. And here are a few statistics that I noticed in the top 34 films (those with three votes or higher):
Scariest decade: the 70’s. Here’s the breakdown: 1920’s – 1 film, 1930’s – 2 films, 1940’s and 50’s no films, 1960’s – 4 films, 1970’s – 9 films, 1980’s 8 films, 1990’s – 3 films, 2000’s – 6 films, and after 2010 – 1 film.
Here’s the breakdown of the villians/monsters in the top 34 films: aliens – 2, vampires – 3, zombies – 3, serial killers – 8, monsters – 3, demons/the devil – 7, ghosts – 7, and telepathy/telekinesis – 1. Some of the films were a little difficult to categorize, and some could’ve been two of the above choices, but I did my best.
Three directors were represented with two films in the top 34: John Carpenter, Tobe Hooper, and George A. Romero. And Stephen King was the winning writer with 2 films in the top 34.
And for another list of favorite horror movies by geography in the U.S. here’s a link:
http://www.dailydot.com/entertainment/horror-movies-popular-city-state/
I came up with my own list of what I think are the top 25 horror films, and these are also my favorites so they won’t necessarily mirror the top 34 films above.
And here were some close runners up on my Top 25: Evil Dead II, The Amityville Horror, The Omen, Let the Right One In, The Ruins, Predator, and Quarantine.
What do you think about the lists? Have you seen most of these films? All of them? Are there some you still want to see? Do you have your own lists, your own top few favorites?
Please feel free to comment and share your favorites!
Until next time …
Here’s an internet article that should illustrate the power of never giving up. These famous people were initially rejected at first, but they believed in themselves … and the rest is history.
http://mentalfloss.com/article/55416/10-rejection-letters-sent-famous-people
Also, I came across this article a while back and found it again. It’s a list of famous authors and bestselling books that were initially rejected by publishers, sometimes many times. Some of the number of rejections are amazing.
Check it out here:
http://www.literaryrejections.com/best-sellers-initially-rejected/
Just wanted to share those with you. And I hope it inspires someone out there.
Back to work now, and I’ll post another blog soon. Until then …
I know I just shared an article about Kurt Vonnegut’s tips on writing, and if you click on the links in that article you can find tips from other great writers (like H.P. Lovecraft, Steinbeck, Henry Miller, Stephen King, and more), but I came across this article that lists 21 tips from Stephen King. These are from his book “On Writing.” Even though these tips are great, I still recommend reading “On Writing.” I’ve read it at least three times, and I find myself going back over it again and again. If you haven’t read it yet, then these tips might be a great place for you to start if you’re an aspiring author.
Here’s the link:
http://time.com/4031323/stephen-king-writing-advice/?xid=tcoshare
Enjoy, and if you have any comments please share.
Hope this helps someone … and until next time …
Someone shared this article with me, so I thought I would pass it along. These are eight tips on writing by the late Kurt Vonnegut. Here is the link:
I have read these eight tips before, but it never hurts to refresh.
Also in this article, there are links to other writers giving advice, including Stephen King from his book “On Writing,” which I still think is one of the best books about the craft of writing that I’ve ever read.
And “The Elements of Style” by Strunk and White is also mentioned in this article. I feel that this very slim volume about the craft and grammar of writing is indispensable for a writer. If you could only have two books about the craft and grammar of writing (even though there are so many other great ones), you couldn’t go wrong with those two I just mentioned.
Enjoy the article, and please feel free to comment if you want to.
P.S. You can always join my e-mail list by clicking on the “e-mail sign up” words by scrolling down in the blog. I am going to be starting a newsletter very soon with more tips, articles, updates, and … well, I’m up for suggestions on other content.
Hope this helps … and until next time …
I wanted to give some writing tips over the next few months, some things that have helped me along the way, things I would like to share. So here’s the first one.
FORCING YOURSELF TO SIT DOWN AND WRITE THAT FIRST DRAFT
I’m not usually a big procrastinator – I like to get things done. I’m pretty organized, and I’m a list-maker. I love the satisfaction of checking things off of my weekly, monthly, and yearly list of things I want to get done (mostly having to do with writing).
But I will admit that there are times when I procrastinate about writing. I know I should just sit down and push through a tough spot in a novel I’m working on (Devil’s Island comes to mind as I mentioned in my previous post), but sometimes I’ll put the writing off and find something else to do.
Like anything else to do. I’ll clean the house. Go to the store. Check e-mail. Do some “research.” Reorganize the drawers of my desk.
One trick I’ve learned is to force myself to just start writing anything. And sometimes the computer is a little too daunting for this so I’ll get some notebook paper and a pen and just start jotting some things down, even writing down exactly what I’m stuck on in the story or novel. And sometimes, through the magic of just writing stuff down, the juices start flowing or floodgates open or the theatrical curtain in front of the mind’s eye opens (insert your own here), and soon I’ve written five or six pages and I can’t wait to open up the Word Doc and begin typing.
So, the next time you’re putting writing off, just sit down with some paper and a pen and just start writing. Write anything. Jot down some notes, outline a little – making it more and more detailed until you’re actually writing, do some character bios, write down exactly what you’re stuck on, or write a quick scene between two of the characters in your story – it doesn’t have to have anything to do with your story or novel, and it may never make it in there, but just through the act of writing, inspiration may come to you.
It’s worth a try the next time you’re stuck.
Hope this helps someone – and if you have any comments or suggestions for future posts, please feel free to share them.
Thanks … until next time …