Northwest Author Series

Entries categorized as ‘Northwest Author Series 2008/2009’

Highlights from Elizabeth Lyon’s Presentation on How to Write Nonfiction Book Proposals

June 2, 2009 · 1 Comment

Ashleigh RousselleNotes by Ashleigh Rousselle

A nonfiction book proposal is a business report but it needs to get people excited about your work.

Sixty pages or three chapters should be included.

Novelists have to write the entire novel before; Nonfiction authors need to see if their idea should be developed.

“About the Author” means “Why are you qualified to write this book?”

Expect to be studied personally to see how well you can sell your books. Build your platform! (Platform is self promotion.)

It’s guesswork—you need to convince them that your book will sell in one-three years. Find statistics.

Memoirs can’t just be about yourself, you need a universal/relatable theme.

“A book for everybody is a book for no one”—Define your audience: gender, age groups…  (Women buy more books).

An illusion: making money off books.  75% of books published don’t make back their advance.

Writing books for not a lot of money still allows you to reach the audience you want to reach and could still bring future opportunities.

Multiple books can build an audience.

Go to amazon.net; be clever with synonyms. Find books comparable to what you plan to write (That aren’t self published, and came out within the last five years).

Comparing your book to books that are already published pushes you to make yours different.

If you have already written your book, it probably will need to be revised (a lot), but it’ll be finished by the deadline…

Your writing has to be deemed “professional,” continue improving it

You need to write in an entertaining way, it has to be rewarding/interesting on every page.

If you’re writing a memoir, be prepared to be asked for the whole thing. (Though you could always chop it into smaller pieces and publish them wherever you can.)

Anything you’ve written is already copyrighted. (Protects writers.)

“Fast tracked books” come out six months to a year.

Books can be deemed “out of print”—located in the contract.

Children’s Writers: publishers prefer to assign illustrators for your book.

When selecting your theee sample chapters select consecutive for memoirs, and representative for “how to” books.

Categories: Ashleigh Rousselle · Elizabeth Lyon · Nonfiction writing · Northwest Author Series 2008/2009

NAS Presents: Carmen T Bernier Grand on Writing Children’s Books

April 6, 2009 · Leave a Comment

ctbg-publicitySunday, April 19 at the Wilsonville Public Library in the Oak Room from 2:30 – 4:30 p.m.

Three words that start with sounds of the letter R—write, read, revise—will be the topics of this presentation. Carmen T.  Bernier-Grand will share and have group discussion on how she revised her published books. Participants are encouraged to bring short pieces to revise.

Carmen T. Bernier-Grand is the author of six books for children and young adults. Her books include two biographies in poems, one in prose, two anthologies of Puerto Rican folklore, and a novel. Her César: ¡Sí, se puede! Yes, We Can! and her Frida: ¡Viva la vida! Long Live Life. Frida received Pura Belpré honors. is a Booklist Best Ten Biographies. Diego: Bigger than Life, illustrated by David Diaz, will be out in 2009.

Categories: Carmen T. Bernier Grand · Northwest Author Series 2008/2009 · Wilsonville Public Library

Northwest Author Series for the 2008-2009 Season

July 28, 2008 · Leave a Comment

The Northwest Author Series is a literary speaker series sponsored by The Wilsonville Public Library, The Wilsonville Friends of the Library, and the Wilsonville Arts & Culture Council. The series is organized and hosted by Wilsonville author Christina Katz. We are pleased to announce the presenters for our upcoming season:

  • Sunday, September 21, How to Write and Market Personal Stories with Samantha Ducloux Waltz
  • Sunday, October 19, The Play’s the Thing with Cynthia Whitcomb
  • Sunday, November 16, The Pros and Cons of Self-Publishing with Linda Kuhlmann
  • Sunday, January 25, Platform Primer For Aspiring Authors with Christina Katz
  • Sunday, February 22, Essential Skills For Every Fiction Writer with Christine Fletcher
  • Sunday, March 15, Flex Your Freelance Potential with Brian Libby
  • Sunday, April 19, Writing Children’s Books with Carmen T Bernier Grand
  • Sunday, May 17, The Successful Nonfiction Book Proposal with Elizabeth Lyon

Time is always: 2:30 – 4:30 p.m.

Cost is $5.00 at the door. Refreshments and door prizes will be provided.

To sign up for our e-newsletter, please click on the envelope glyph in the upper right corner.

For more information, please contact Christina Katz at christina katz at earthlink dot net.

Categories: Northwest Author Series 2008/2009