May 21, 2012

5 Q’s with Wendy Burt-Thomas

Wendy Burt-Thomas has written more than a thousand articles and three books, most recently The Writer’s Digest Guide to Queries; Landing articles, agents and book deals. Wendy and I chatted about query letters, book writing, and more.

Urban Muse: What are the most common mistakes writers make when writing a query letter?
Wendy:
They rush through it. I think this is especially true for fiction writers who have a completed novel. They pour all their effort into completing the book and then take five minutes to craft a query. The greatest book in the world will never get read if you can’t entice an agent/editor with a great query.

UM: Do you prefer writing a book length manuscript or shorter projects like articles and greeting cards?
W:
Greeting cards are definitely my favorite thing to write – especially humor. I enjoy writing articles but when you write as many as I do (sometimes 20+ a month), it can get tedious. Books are nice because you can work at your own pace. This book was actually one of the easiest and most fun pieces I’ve ever worked on. I’d been teaching a workshop on the topic for eight years (and making a living as a freelance writer) so I wrote the first half of the book in a few weeks. Writing doesn’t seem like work when you feel passionate about the topic!

UM: How do you stay motivated and organized when working on longer projects?

W: I never spend an entire day working on just one project. If I’m working on a book, for example, I’ll stop and do some work for clients (writing greeting cards, editing magazines, writing a press release). Then I’ll head back to the book, then break for emails or lunch. I know some people have a difficult time switching mid-project, but that’s how I keep things interesting.

UM: What is the best freelance writing advice you’ve ever gotten?
W:
Never pass up an opportunity. Of course, right now, it’s not possible (or profitable) for me to jump on every opportunity that comes my way. I am fortunate that I have plenty of steady work (and book #3 to promote). But the advice served me well when I was first starting as a freelancer. I figured I would seize the opportunity and either be glad I did – or learn from it. I’d say 99% of the opportunities helped me get where I am today. The other 1% gave me something to warn other writers about!

My favorite quote is “Luck is when preparation meets opportunity.” Be prepared to become a successful writer.

UM: Any new projects coming up?
W:
I just got off the phone with my agent and I have an idea for another writing-related book that she thinks might fare well. I just have to find the time to write a proposal! (Did I mention that in addition to full-time work and promoting my new book, I also have a 1-year-old and 3-year-old…and a husband deploying to Afghanistan?) I’m not lazy, I swear. Just busy. ; )

In the meantime, I’m promoting my new program, “10 Questions for…” Every day on my blog I ask a different author the same 10 questions about getting published, writing life, messy desks, embarrassing stories, etc. I think I have enough authors to profile one a day for the next 2 years and I’m thrilled. The answers are sometimes hysterically funny and I think writers like to hear about real authors who got tons of rejections when they started.

Thanks, Wendy!

Guest Post: Give Your Title a Good Spunking

By Gene Wilburn

You finish your article, essay, or blog entry, putting the final polish on your prose, declaring it ready to go. Almost. Except for the title. If you’re like most writers, you have a working title — something you used to give your work focus during the writing — and it’s often about as catchy as a scientific paper on speciation in savannah sparrows. Dull.

Titles. They can make or break your chance of grabbing a reader’s interest. Newspaper and magazine editors know better than anyone that nothing captures your attention faster than a snappy title. Get the reader as far as the first paragraph and you have a good chance of snagging that five seconds or less of interest most readers spend before deciding whether to read on or skip to something else.

Good titles are especially important in science stories. We’re not a science-oriented society, despite its critical underpinning of modern life. We, as casual readers (assuming you’re not science-trained), are easily bored and have an innate resistance to anything that sounds ‘scientific’, ‘educational’ or ‘difficult’. Give us straight science and, mentally, we run the other way. But use the right lure and you might just hook us.

Take this example from the NYTimes Online science section: British Fight Climate Change With Fish and Chips. That’s not just intriguing — it’s funny, with echoes of Monty Python. The article, by Elisabeth Rosenthall, is a story about how used non-fossil-fuel cooking oil from fish and chip stands are being recycled and sold directly to car owners who pour it into the tanks of their diesel-powered autos. It’s an excellent piece, but would you be as tempted to read it if it were titled “UK Diesel Car Owners Try an Alternative Fuel Source”?

Not all stories lend themselves to snappy titles but it’s worth it when they do. It doesn’t always take much, sometimes a single word at the end: Geographers Find bin Laden — Theoretically. I particularly liked this title: Data Uncover Bigger Galaxy in Cosmos, and It’s Ours, about how the Milky Way is far larger than originally estimated.

Health science articles attract us more easily than the other sciences mainly because we obsess about health issues. The stories are more immediate to our lives than alternative diesel fuels or the size of galaxies. Even so, a catchy title is good for grabbing our attention: Great Workout, Forget the View, is a story on how stair climbing can give you as good, or better, workout than an elliptical trainer with an expensive health club membership attached.

Or how about Your Morning Pizza, a piece on rethinking traditional breakfast foods. Health articles also have the advantage of grabbing our attention with anything that sounds controversial or iconoclastic: Vitamin Pills: A False Hope?

It’s not just science and health stories that need good titles, of course. Any piece you write with a catchy title has a better chance of being read. For instance, I’m not innately interested in reading about the buying patterns of Japanese youth, but Sayonara, Prada, an article by Alexandra Harney in The Atlantic, on how Japanese youngsters are turning away from luxury goods, hooked me for a good, thoughtful, read.

Titles with puns catch my fancy immediately — such as Bear Essentials, an article by Jo Calvert in Canadian Living on knitting bears. I don’t knit, but I read some of the article simply because of the title. This title would work equally well for a chapter or pamphlet on camping in bear territory.

Thinking up good titles for essays, short stories, and novels is even harder. What words can be used to invoke the right feeling or mood? Gone With the Wind? Good one, but taken. For Whom the Bell Tolls? Can’t use that one either — well you can, but you’d better have something awfully good to pull it off or it’ll look pretentious. Puns on famous titles, however, can deliver a fresh take. How about a retro look at how you became totally hooked on fantasy literature: Gone With the Wand. Or a serious piece on money woes called For Whom the Bill Tolls.

The trouble with thinking up with good titles for blog postings or short essays is that it can take more time than the piece itself. And there’s that dark place in our brains that fears we might use up all our good title ideas and run out. It won’t happen, but the best way to convince yourself of that is to keep practicing. After you’ve come up with a zinger or two, it gets easier, and more fun.

Try to think up a catchy title for every piece you do. Give it some pizazz, some spunk. Your editor may change it (some of mine don’t share my sense of humor), but when one of your best titles gets through the editorial process intact, and you see it in print or online, it adds sizzle to your satisfaction. Not to mention luring additional readers. And isn’t that one of the reasons we write?

Gene Wilburn is a Canadian essayist, blogger, magazine writer, and co-host of the Creative NonFiction Writing Forums.

Bon Voyage!

Starting tomorrow, I will be offline for several days soaking up the Caribbean sun and trying not to burn. But don’t worry, because I have some excellent guest bloggers lined up for Guest Blogger’s Month in February. They range from up-and-comers to freelancers who have contributed to US Airways magazine and the New York Times. There’s a self-titled suburban muse, a set of twin translators, and a few newly pubbed authors in the mix.

Once I return, I plan to pop in here and there with a few posts of my own, but either way I hope that you’ll continue reading and commenting for my guest bloggers. And if you want to contribute a guest post but haven’t had a chance to contact me, then shoot me an email with “February blogger” in the subject line and I’ll schedule your post after I get caught up on email.

Happy writing!

Photo courtesy of Andries3

Conference Time

Bright and early tomorrow morning, I will be leaving for the first ever Freelance Success Conference in Tampa, so things may be a little quiet around here for the next few days. Or maybe not. I hope to have some exciting news to share when I get back, but if things materialize sooner, I just might have to squeeze in a quick post between sessions. Stay tuned!