Friday, September 29, 2006
Hot Dogs, Detergents & Hair Care--Oh My!; Put those Jingles and Catch Phrases Repeating in Your Head to Work
Make a list of your favorite marketing jingles and catch phrases, for example "The stainlifter, that's all," "Don't just shampoo your hair. Infuse it..." or "Oh, I wish I were an Oscar Meyer weiner..." etc. Then make a list of the one's that you'd rather you'd never heard or wouldn't have to hear anymore. Can you string them together to make a short story or use one of them as a beginning line?
D.M.H.
Thursday, September 28, 2006
Is it bad form to review your reviewers?
D.M.H.
Wednesday, September 27, 2006
Have you considered adding interviews to your freelance work?
Tuesday, September 26, 2006
How are you building your arsenal--of ideas?
“Books won't stay banned. They won't burn. Ideas won't go to jail. In the long run of history, the censor and the inquisitor have always lost. The only sure weapon against bad ideas is better ideas.”
—Alfred Whitney Griswold, Essays on Education
Source: American Library Association; www.ala.org
Monday, September 25, 2006
Read any banned books lately?
D.M.H.
Are you growing the possibilities for yourself or your cause?
D.M.H.
Word for the Week
ag·gran·dize
Function: transitive verb
Inflected Form(s): -dized; -diz·ing
Etymology: French agrandiss-, stem of agrandir, from a- (from Latin ad-) + grandir to increase, from Latin grandire, from grandis great
1 : to make great or greater : INCREASE, ENLARGE
Source: www.webster.com
Friday, September 22, 2006
Do you have a poem, an essay or a short story in your pocket?
Empty your wallet, pockets or purse. Select a three or four items and jot down the ideas, memories or emotions which come to mind when you look at them. Then use your notes to write a piece.
D.M.H.
Thursday, September 21, 2006
Do you have a national security stories based on classified information to pitch?
D.M.H.
Judgment Calls
How top editors decide whether to publish national security stories based on classified information
By Rachel Smolkin Rachel Smolkin (rsmolkin@ajr.umd.edu) is AJR's managing editor.
"In interviews with AJR, top editors at the newspapers involved in recent high-profile skirmishes, as well as other authorities on national security reporting, explained how stories based on classified information are reported and how editors decide whether to publish in the face of administration objections. (AJR also requested interviews with Cheney and White House Press Secretary Tony Snow; both declined.) "
Source: American Journalism Review--ajr.org
Wednesday, September 20, 2006
Everybody Has One: Bloggers and the Death of Opinion Journalism
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Book Lovers Step Up And Vote for Your Winners
The Quill Book Awards
"The Quills celebrates the best books of the year in 20 popular categories, ranging from romance to biography to graphic novels."*
You've been reading, discussing and critiquing your book choices all year. Now, dear readers, you have the opportunity to show your favorite authors and their publishers your appreciation with your vote. Click on the link in this post's heading to learn more.
D.M.H.
*Source: MSNBC.com
Tuesday, September 19, 2006
Are you living fearlessly?
"It's all about loving oneself--but one's true self, not a facade of who we are. When you get in touch with your true self, that's when your inner beauty can reveal itself."
--Sue Smiley on fearlessness
from On Becoming Fearless in Love, Work & Life
by Arianna Huffington
Monday, September 18, 2006
Are you taking advantage of your gateway opportunities?
Everyday, we stand at the gateway of new possibilities. Of course, we must continue to perform the tasks which sustain us, our families and the activities which will lead to the achievement of our goals, but do we take advantage of the "new" quality of each day? Do you awake to stand at the threshold of your bedroom or front door and step across with the perspective that today will be a day full of threshold moments, a day full of results and progress?
thresh·old
Function: noun
Etymology: Middle English thresshold, from Old English threscwald; akin to Old Norse threskjoldr threshold, Old English threscan to thresh
1 : the plank, stone, or piece of timber that lies under a door : SILL2 a : GATE, DOOR b (1) : END, BOUNDARY; specifically : the end of a runway (2) : the place or point of entering or beginning : OUTSET
Wednesday, September 13, 2006
Lists Are A Great Tool for Those in Search of Inspiration
Make a list of 50 words that you find particularly appealing. A few of my favorites are serendipity, ephemeral, audacious and pernicious. Use the list to write a short story or poem. If you find that your list has a theme, it could be an opportunity to write an essay.
The Best Writers Continue Educating Themselves After Graduation
Check out these short useful articles at Worldwide Freelance Writer. If you want to be a great writer and make a living, you have to stay current on the creative and business trends of writing. On the creative side that means reading about your craft, reading other writers and writing yourself. On the business end, it means researching markets, knowing what publishers are wanting to publish and submitting your work. Writing 101 is a good place to start.
Tuesday, September 12, 2006
Monday, September 11, 2006
Je me souviens.~ I remember.
As we commemorate the 5th anniverary of the destruction of the World Trade Center and the deaths caused, the motto of Quebec, "I remember," scrolls across my mind. Those whose friends and family members died on this day will not forget, because the absence of those they knew and loved is a constant reminder. The general public cannot forget, because the magnitude of 9/11 has changed the way we live, our laws, the way we travel and our national outlook. We remember, because to forget seems to invite the occurence of a similar man-made disaster, and thus we guard against it. A war on terror....I don't know about that...I do believe that more than anything, we are participants in the neverending struggle to recognize and encourage the best of human nature and curb its worst.
Peace to the souls of all who died at "ground-zero" on 9/11 and peace to you.
Friday, September 08, 2006
Latin Proverb: Cave ab homine unius libri
Cave ab homine unius libri
Translation: "Beware the man of one book."
Thursday, September 07, 2006
Miss Snark's Crapometer could save your query letter or book proposal
I revisited Miss Snark's blog today and read her critiques of several queries and book proposals. She recently took Crapometer submissions and is currently reviewing them and posting her responses. She points to several basics that those submitting to agents should keep in mind:
- Address the agent/editor by name--do your research!
- Use your spelling and grammar check before sending the submission!
- Have a hook--if you didn't know how the story ends, would you keep reading it?
- If what you've written screams cliche, throw it back!
Take a look. You might find something helpful. Reading the submission critiques might make you feel better or terrify you, but as long as you have a sense of humor, you will laugh.
D.M.H.
Wednesday, September 06, 2006
Katie Couric's Make-over as a lesson in evolution
I've been relatively uninterested in the recent coverage of Katie Couric's emerging news anchor persona--mainly, because I don't watch CBS nightly news. I prefer ABC or NBC. However, the lengths to which Katie and CBS Nightly News have gone to revamp their image speaks to the importance of knowing one's medium, audience and message when embracing change in the communications business.
This whole transition also speaks to the ability to recognize when a change or evolution in presentation, content and style are necessary. Take an hour today and look over your writing, marketing approach and pending projects. Can your website use a little streamlining? Are your business cards current? Think about what you can do today to show that you take your writing and other professional efforts seriously, while projecting an aura of confidence and authority. I may not watch Katie tonight, but I will learn from her example.
Tuesday, September 05, 2006
How do you define progress?
H. L. Mencken
Sen. Lillian DeHaven: If a cannibal used a knife and fork, would you call that progress?
Movie~G.I. Jane
Law and order exist for the purpose of establishing justice and ... when they fail in this purpose they become the dangerously structured dams that block the flow of social progress.'
Letter from Birmingham Jail' in Why We Can't Wait 1963
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Source: http://www.quotegeek.com/
Word for the Week: What's sacrosanct in your life?
–adjective
1.extremely sacred or inviolable: a sacrosanct chamber in the temple.
2.not to be entered or trespassed upon: She considered her home office sacrosanct.
3.above or beyond criticism, change, or interference: a manuscript deemed sacrosanct.
[Origin: 1595–1605; sacred, saint] —Related forms sac‧ro‧sanc‧ti‧ty, sac‧ro‧sanct‧ness, noun
Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.0.1)Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006.
Friday, September 01, 2006
Bonsais, minimarshmallows and Lilliput
Why are we fascinated with things in miniature? Some things are made smaller to make them playthings or more accessible to children. Take for example dollhouses and toddler furniture. On other occasions we make smaller versions of things, because we can, as in the cases of breeding miniature ponies and crafting porcelain china sets. In the case of bonsai trees, I belive the art of minituarizing large plants was perfected in order to bring a reminder of the vast potential of nature and the need for its care into human spaces. In movies and books, we miniaturize people as in Gulliver's Travels and Alice and Wonderland. Do these fictions symbolize our desire/fear to make our experiences more manageable or be managed ourselves?
What would you create in miniature if you could and why?
What miniature items do you use or simply enjoy displaying and why?



