Friday, July 08, 2005

150th Anniversary of Walt Whitman's, Leaves of Grass



"I lean and loafe at my ease... observing a spear of summer grass."
From Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman


On July 4, 1855, an unknown poet, Walt Whitman, changed forever the way we would look at poetry. Leaves of Grass came out to mixed reviews and widespread disinterest. It took many years but eventually this book changed the way poets wrote... and the way they thought of themselves.

This summer marks the 150th anniversary of Walt Whitman's, first of its kind, free-verse. Published in July 1855, Leaves of Grass expanded poetry's boundaries.

Thursday, July 07, 2005

New Blog - http://www.patrickotoole.com/


Our very own, Patrick O'Toole has great new blog. His review of the hit movie, War of the Worlds was very intereresting and... written with a unique slant. He did more than simply re-cap the movie, he gave it a very personal touch. Nice job!

Stop by his blog and be sure to leave a "comment." When you do, you might mention that you are a fellow member of the NJCWG and that you saw mention of his blog here - on OUR blog (grin)...

http://www.patrickotoole.com/

Louise Bergmann DuMont
Facilitator NJCWG

Show vs. Tell



Why you should SHOW, rather than TELL, your story...

TELLING gives the reader information about what happened but does not ask them to "be there" for the event.
SHOWING creates a mental picture for the reader. Our society is more visual than ever before and readers insist on visual narrative.

TELLING holds the reader at arms-length. The author is involved -- the reader is not.
SHOWING is participatory. It involves the reader in the story by evoking feelings and by forcing the reader to think for themselves and draw their own conclusions.

TELLING asks the reader to think or act a certain way.
SHOWING unveils the event and lets the reader draw their own conclusion.

TELLING preaches "at" the reader.
SHOWING helps to avoid preachy writing.

TELLING makes the reader feel "dumb" because the author tends to bang them over the head with the details.
SHOWING lets the reader know you think they are smart enough to "get the point" of your manuscript.

Points offered by:
Louise Bergmann DuMont
Founder and Facilitator of the NJCWG
Director of the NJCWG - A Reason to Write Conference

Philadelphia Christian Writers' Conference


This message came to me from Marlene Bagnull. She gave me permission to post this on our blog.

TO NJCWG MEMBERS: A number of NJCWG members have attended the Philly conference in the past. If you want to attend this year's conference, let me know and I'll see who else is going. You might be able to car pool.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Greater Philadelphia Christian Writers Conference
August 18 - 20, 2005
Holding Out the Word of Life
Shine out among them like beacon lights,
holding out to them the Word of Life.
Philippians 2:16 tlb
www.writehisanswer.com/Philadelphia
Marlene Bagnull
Founder & Director

New Hands-On Opportunities at This Year's Conference & Scholarship Help (if needed) for a Member of Your Group
In 1983 I founded the Greater Philadelphia Christian Writers Fellowship and planned our first day-long seminar. I've often said that if I knew how God was going to grow this ministry, my lack of confidence in myself would have caused me to run the other way. But God has patiently shown me that self-confidence isn't the answer. God-confidence is what's important! And so what started as a day-long seminar in 1983 has grown to a three-day conference with a faculty, this year, of 53 authors, editors, and agents. God surely is doing "exceedingly, abundantly beyond . . ."

One of the challenges of directing for over twenty years is to keep the conference fresh and new. Therefore, this year, I've expanded the hands-on opportunities.
~ * ~ * ~ * ~
Fiction Clinic with editor and fiction coach, Kathleen Wright
Energize your stalled story.
Revitalize your flat characters.
Discover how to draw readers into your character's journey
while building to an exciting climax.
In this six-hour clinic, Kathleen will analyze a 1-2 page synopsis and first chapter (maximum 12 pages) of your novel and determine its strengths and weaknesses. She will demonstrate hands-on techniques that you will practice on your own story. Learn by doing! "In working with clients," Kathleen says, "I have observed that problems fall into common areas: tension through focus, The Five Levels of Intensity, goal-motivation-conflict and story gaps with the Hero's Journey."
Best-selling novelist, Lauraine Snelling, says:
"Kathleen has an innate sense of story structure. She can find holes in the
story and problems with point of view and characters with the accuracy of an
Olympic marksman."
~ * ~ * ~ * ~
Nonfiction Clinic with Mark Littleton, a prolific author of more than 80 books and literary agent.
Do those rejection letters keep rolling in? Learn how to hone a manuscript that will excite an agent or an editor. Find and fix common problems that can get in the way of becoming a successful non-fiction writer. In this six-hour clinic Mark will demonstrate hands-on techniques for you to practice in each session based on the book proposal and first chapter (maximum 12 pages) submitted by group members prior to the conference. By the end of this clinic, you’ll have a marketable proposal ready to go . . . or close to it!
~ * ~ * ~ * ~
Each clinic is LIMITED to 10 serious authors. You need to be registered for the entire conference to participate in one of the clinics. Click on "Clinics" at www.writehisanswer.com/Philadelphia for an application. Your application needs to be received (via email) no later than JULY 23. The clinics are held during the 6 hour-long workshops.
~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~
New Hands-On Workshop Track (for those not in one of the clinics)
Choose 6 hour-long workshops from the 42 offered, including these new hands-on workshops:
Spurring Your Creativity
Selling What You Write
Beware: 28 Pitfalls Ahead
Overcoming Writer's Block
Bringing People to Life
How to Edit Your Own Manuscript
~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~
8 Continuing Sessions
Fiction 101 ~ Randy Ingermanson
Let There Be Lights...Camera...Action ~ Kathryn Mackel
Nonfiction that Impacts Lives and the Kingdom ~ Craig Bubeck
Spirituality vs Strategy ~ Allison Gappa Bottke
Write Expectations ~ Lisa Crayton
Writing to Change Lives ~ Donna Partow
Writing for Children ~ Cindy Kenney,
Tim Shoemaker, Etta Wilson, Jennifer Reed, & Karen Whiting
and new this year
The Nangie Experience for Advanced Novelists
Nancy Rue & Angie Hunt
NOTE: The application for The Nangie Experience
(click Continuing Sessions at www.writehisanswer.com/Philadelphia)
needs to be received by email no later than July 23.
~ * ~ * ~ * ~
Please forward this email to members of your group and encourage them to pray about coming. If there is someone in your group who has financial need, I'll be glad to work with you. Please contact me ASAP either by email or calling 610-626-6833 or (if you get a recording) 610-209-2623.
In His Service - Marlene
For more conference info visit:
www.writehisanswer.com/Philadelphia

The Greater Philadelphia Christian Writers Conference
is more than a place to meet editors and learn the craft.
It is truly a spiritual retreat
for all those called to write as ministry and mission.
Even as a teacher, I always leave hearing God more clearly.
Nancy Rue - Award-winning author

Encouraging and equipping you to write about a God who is real,
who is reachable, and who changes lives!
_______________________________________________
Marlene Bagnull, Litt.D.
Encouraging & equipping Christians to "write His answer" through
books, tapes, seminars, mentoring, and conferences since 1983!

Greater Philadelphia Christian Writers Conference
August 18-20, 2005 at Philadelphia Biblical University, Langhorne, PA

Colorado Christian Writers Conference
May 17-20, 2006 at YMCA of the Rockies, Estes Park, CO

www.writehisanswer.com
316 Blanchard Road, Drexel Hill, PA 19026-3507
610-626-6833
_______________________________________________________

"Write my answer on a billboard, large and clear, so that anyone
can read it at a glance and rush to tell the others." Habakkuk 2:2 TLB
_______________________________________________________

Wednesday, July 06, 2005

Writing Op - Terrain.Org



Terrain.org: A Journal of the Built & Natural Environments

Terrain.org is an online twice-yearly journal critically acclaimed for its literary and technical contributions relating to the built and natural environments.

PRIZES: Publication (in other words -- no monetary payment at this time)
REQUIREMENTS: We accept fiction and articles. View Terrain.org at http://www.terrain.org for samples of what we prefer, as well as submission guidelines.
WEB: http://www.terrain.org
SUBMISSIONS: editors@terrain.org
CONTACT: Simmons Buntin
TELEPHONE: (520) 241-7390

Writing Op - The Subway Chronicles



The Subway Chronicles
DEADLINE: 25th of each month
PUBLICATION: Monthly
REQUIREMENTS: We are seeking creative nonfiction essays ranging from 1,000 to 3,000 words, centering on experiences on the New York subway system. We are looking for literary work that emphasizes craft and precision, dynamic characters, and strong plot. Simultaneous submissions accepted, if notified. Include brief cover letter of how to contact you, and include word count.
FEES: None
WEB: http://www.thesubwaychronicles.com/

Writing Op - Adoptive Family



GUIDELINES

Adoptive Families is the leading information resource for families before, during, and after adoption. The award-winning national bimonthly magazine provides independent, authoritative adoption information in an accessible and reader-friendly format.

Each issue of Adoptive Families is built around stories of adoption written by people who read the magazine closely and regularly. This active community of readers also offers thoughtful, deeply felt responses to the pieces we publish.

We want to hear your stories. We encourage you to share your insights and experiences with other adoptive families. And we're always looking for great writing.

Core topics covered in every issue:
Preparing for adoption; health issues; school and education; family, friends, and community; birthfamilies; talking about adoption; parenting tips and guidelines

DEPARTEMENTS

The Waiting Game: A special section for pre-adopters. Parenting the Child Who Waited: Raising children who have lived without a permanent family
About Birthparents: Stories about, and sometimes by, birthfamilies
Been There: Adults speak honestly about their experiences of growing up adopted
Adoption & School: Advice from teachers, parents, and experts on education-related issues
In My Opinion: An editorial on a controversial subject
At Home: A personal essay
Single Parent: Single parents share their experiences
Living with Diversity: For and by families who’ve adopted transracially or from other cultures
Parent Exchange: Readers share information with the Adoptive Families community
Letters: Responses from readers to past articles and other readers' letters
Lois Melina's Adopted Child: A regular column by the nation's leading expert on parenting adopted children
Growing Up Adopted: Age-specific developmental information from experts, including adoption pediatricians, members of the American Academy of Pediatrics
Legal Q&A: Leading adoption attorneys answer readers' questions
Calendar of Events: Parents support group events around the country
Book Reviews: Reviews by knowledgeable reviewers
Adoption New and Notes: Legislative and policy updates, with occasional "News Focus" articles elaborating on a particular item or issue in the news
Bulletin Board: Resources for Adoptive Families

(Departments listed above from "The Waiting Game" down through "Letters" are ones for which we typically accept submissions.)

HOW TO SUBMIT AN ARTICLE OR ESSAY

Personal essays: Before sending us your personal essay, we recommend that you take a look at the suggestions below, under "What We're Looking For."

Reported articles on adoption-related topics: In the case of reported articles on adoption-related topics, we prefer that you send a query letter (via e-mail or regular mail) before sending in your article. Again, take a look at recent issues of the magazine; we're less likely to publish a piece on a topic we’ve recently covered.

Query letters should include:
• A brief description or outline of your idea
• Why you think it belongs in our magazine
• Why you should be the one to write it
• If possible, a sense of where in the magazine you believe your story might fit, whether as a feature or in a particular department; see list of departments above
• Any recent clips you may have

How to send them:
• We prefer to receive submissions via e-mail, as attachments. But we accept submissions via US mail, as well.
• You may also wish to send family photographs with your story, particularly in the case of personal essays. We prefer scanned photos e-mailed as attachments. We can also use prints sent by mail, but we cannot guarantee that unsolicited photographs will be returned.

When you'll hear from us, payment, etc.:
• It generally takes us 6-8 weeks to respond to a submission.
• Writers of personal essays we publish will receive a one-year subscription to the magazine. Payment for reported articles varies. We're a small magazine; our pay rates are scaled accordingly.
• We consider all submissions on a speculative basis. We cannot guarantee that a proposed article, even one that we've expressed interest in, will be published.
• We cannot assume responsibility for unsolicited material or guarantee its return.
• You should submit a brief, two- or three-sentence biographical note at the end of each submission.

Send queries and submissions to:
Susan Caughman, Adoptive Families, letters@adoptivefamilies.com
or
39 W. 37th St.
15th Floor
New York, NY 10018

THING THAT WILL HELP YOU GET PUBLISHED IN ADOPTIVE FAMILY

• Know the magazine. Look through past issues. Get a sense of our general tone. Familiarize yourself with the topics we generally cover. Consider which of our departments your story might best fit.
• Have a clear sense of your central theme. (E.g., "How I included extended family in our adoption process," "Traditions and rituals bind families together," "Networking can help to make the waiting period less agonizing.") Think about what makes your story unique—or what useful information families in similar situations might gain from it.
• Keep it active. Describe not only what happened to you, but how you chose to deal with it.
• Focus on choices made and strategies used to deal with a particular situation. (E.g., "We realized our parents weren't ready to be supportive, and we didn't have the energy to deal with their criticism on every single point, so we offered them only general information as we progressed through the adoption process;" "When my daughter started being questioned by her classmates about her adoption, I offered her teacher tips on how to inform the class about adoption in general without invading any individual student's privacy.") Keep it active. Describe not only what happened to you, but how you chose to deal with it.
• Be specific. The more specific the details you provide, the more useful—and engaging—your story will be for other adoptive families. And bear in mind, even the most "ordinary" of experiences—the ones many people share—can be extraordinarily inspiring to read about. Other readers can learn from your experiences—even from your mistakes. We do receive many, many "How I Adopted" stories. But each of these can offer something unique if it maintains a strong focus on a central theme.

Typical subjects and themes:
For a quick glimpse of themes and subjects other Adoptive Families writers have explored, read the "decks" (the lines that appear between the title and the beginning of the story) in articles from past issues.

Areas we are currently looking to cover:
• Middle-school and teen years
• Relatives and community
• Adoptive parent support groups
• School
• Foster adoption
• Transracial adoption
• Domestic adoption
• Adoptive parents of color

What we're NOT looking for:
We are not accepting submissions of poetry or fiction at this time.

Tuesday, July 05, 2005

Writing Op - Good Old Days Mag


Name of Magazine: Good Old Days
Publisher: House Of White Birches
Frequency: monthly
Does NOT Accept Email Submissions
Website URL: http://www.goodolddaysonline.com
Description: A look into the past through photos, drawings, cartoons, comics, memories, features, songs, poems, letters, first-person narratives, and recipes.
Editor(s): Ken Tate
Email: Editor@GoodOldDaysOnline.com
Guidelines URL: http://www.goodolddaysonline.com/pages/magazineinfo.html
Address: Good Old Days
306 East Parr Road
Berne, IN 46711

Writing Op - Paying Mkt for Poetry - Blue Mountain Arts



Blue Mountain Arts is interested in reviewing writings that would be appropriate for publication on our greeting cards. We are looking for highly original and creative submissions on love, friendship, family, philosophies, and any other topic that one person might want to share with another.

Please note that we do not accept rhyming poetry.

To submit your work or to request a copy of our writer's guidelines, please email us at editorial@sps.com
or
write to us at:
Blue Mountain Arts, Inc.
Editorial Department
Post Office Box 1007
Boulder, CO 80306

Publisher: SPS Studios, Inc.
Accepts Email Submissions: Yes
Website URL: http://www.sps.com
Description: Publisher of original, sensitive poetry and prose on love, friendship, family and philosophies for use in greetings cards and books.
Email: editorial@spsstudios.com

Thursday, June 30, 2005

Writing Op - Children's Market


From the editor of The Kids' Ark
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The Kids' Ark is a 24-page, 4-color, monthly Christian magazine for children ages 6-12. Each issue is based on a theme (ie: Love, Faith, Obedience, etc.) The magazine offers games, puzzles, comics and Christian fiction stories.

Three fiction stories are used in each issue. Average story length is 600 words and should be written for the 6-8 year old reading level.

Each accepted story pays $100 for First Time North American rights with rights to reprint at a later date. $25 will be paid per story for reprints. Stories should be engaging and applicable to the monthly theme.

Currently, the Ark is accepting story submissions focused on victory.
The deadline for stories is July 22.
Stories should be submitted as e-mail attachments to writingwonder78@yahoo.com.


The Kids’ Ark Purpose: Our whole purpose is to enlighten children with the love and power of God through Jesus. We believe that God wants the best for His children and that through a faith and knowledge of Him, they can have a happy and prosperous life. We also feel that only through Christ can children withstand the temptations and trials that they are being exposed to in these times.

God bless,
Joy Mygrants
Senior Editor
The Kids’ Ark

Cafe Mocha "Light"



My new blog is up and running. Check it out.
www.cafemochalight.blogspot.com

--

Louise Bergmann DuMont
www.cafemochalight.blogspot.com
www.louisedumont.com
Jehovah-Meqaddeshkem
(The Lord Makes Me Holy)
Author, Speaker & Writing Mentor
Recent Releases: Grace By The Cup & Faith-Dipped Chocolate

Writing Op - New Jersey Monthly



The Magazine of the Garden State
New Jersey Monthly, LLC
55 Park Place
P.O. Box 920
Morristown, NJ 07963-0920

Contact: Christopher Hann, senior editor

Phone: (973)539-8230
Fax: (973)538-2953
E-Mail: editor@njmonthly.com
Website: http://www.njmonthly.com/

Magazine covering "just about anything to do with New Jersey, from news, politics, and sports to decorating trends and lifestyle issues. Our readership is well-educated, affluent, and on average our readers have lived in New Jersey 20 years or more.

EDITOR'S TIP: "The best approach: Do your homework! Read the past year's issues to get an understanding of our well-written, well-researched articles that tell a tale from a well-established point of view."

EDITOR'S NOTE: This magazine continues to look for strong investigative reporters with novelistic style and solid knowledge of New Jersey issues.

75-80% freelance writtenEstablished: 1976Circulation: 95,000
Pays on completion of fact-checking.
Publishes manuscript 3 months after acceptance.
Byline given.
Offers 20% kill fee.
Rights purchased: First North American serial rights
Editorial lead time 3 months.Submit seasonal material 6 months in advance
Accepts queries by: Mail, E-mail, Fax, Phone
Accepts simultaneous submissions
Responds in 2 months to queries.

SPECIAL NEEDS: Book excerpts, Essays, Exposé, General Interest, Historical, Humor, Interview/Profile, Personal Experience, Photo Feature, Travel (within New Jersey), arts, sports, politics.
DOES NOT WANT: "No experience pieces from people who used to live in New Jersey or general pieces that have no New Jersey angle."

Buys 90-100 manuscripts/year.
Submission method: Query with published magazine clips and SASE.
Length: 800–3,000 words.
Pays $750-2,500.
Pays reasonable expenses of writers on assignment with prior approval.

Columns open to freelancers:

EXIT RAMP (back page essay usually originating from personal experience but written in a way that tells a broader story of statewide interest), 1,200 words.
Buys 12 columns/year.
Submission method: Query with published clips
Pays $400.

Fillers: Needs Anecdotes (for front-of-book)
Buys 12-15 fillers/year.Length: 200–250 words.
Pays: $100

Wednesday, June 29, 2005

NJCWG - Reminder


~The NJCWG~

NO meeting on 7/11/05 due to the church's VBS using the facility

NEXT MEETING - 7/25/05

Writing Op - Cornerstone



Cornerstone is looking for manuscripts!

FICTION
We accept book-length fiction and short stories. A Christian message is not necessary, but it should reflect a Christian worldview, and have a point. No sex scenes. We are looking for a good story, not a good sermon. We are also looking for literary fiction more than popular fiction. We have not published much fiction but are presently looking for insightful, compelling writing. Both adult fiction and children¹s fiction are welcome.

NONFICTION
We are looking for well-documented nonfiction which addresses relevant social issues or ministry issues.

`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`

MAKE SURE you go to their web site and read all the way through their submission guidelines before doing anything. And please... FOLLOW THE GUIDELINES when you send in your proposal. Otherwise, you might as well toss your stuff straight into the trash, saving postage and avoiding the middleman (since that's probably what they'll do to stuff that doesn't fit what they're looking for).

Go to http://www.cornerstonepress.com/info/writers.html

Writing Op - website content


From one of our newest members, Pat Russo

We're looking for someone to plan and write Web content for the Wells Fargo Home Mortgage public Web site (my day job). Should be someone who is a strong writer and familiar with Web development. There's no coding involved; only writing. Any financial services or mortgage background is a plus. This person will work closely with marketing and various lines of business.

Apply for the position on Monster.com HYPERLINK
http://jobsearch.monster.com/getjob.asp?JobID=31104792&AVSDM=2005%2D06%2D15+18%3A29%3A04&Logo=1&cn=wells+fargo&lid=532&lid=534&sort=rv&vw=b&cy=US&brd=1,128,1862,1863

Picnic Update



Although rain forced us indoors, "a good time was had by all" pretty much sums up the annual NJCWG picnic. The food was amazing! Have you ever tried a Spinach Salad with Strawberries or Potato Salad with no mayonnaise? Yum. My veggie platter (a Stop and Shop speical) just didn't seem equitable.

Our readings brought on everything from belly laughs to tears. The group read out some of their best work ever. I was pleased to hear two published pieces by Clare Cartagena and Lisa Ramadan -- both read from the same anthology! The NJCWG was well represented there. Please note that these authors found that market through a listing on THIS BLOG!

Our next NJCWG social event will be our Christmas party (December 12, 2005). If you missed the picnic, you have no excuse to miss our Christmas event. Get it on your calendar today!

God Bless,
Louise Bergmann DuMont
Facilitator, NJCWG

Monday, June 27, 2005

***PICNIC IS STILL ON***

NJCWG - today's picnic will be ON no matter what the weather. Any quesitons, give me a call.

Louise

NJCWG Message


FOR THE NJCWG

NO MEETING TONIGHT AT THE CHURCH and despite the threat of a possible shower, the NJCWG Picnic is ON. Hope to see you there.

If anyone gets lost or needs directions, call me on my cell OR call Val's house.

Louise Bergmann DuMont
Facilitator of the NJCWG

Forwarded from the editor of YouthWorker Journal:

~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Theme List for the January/February 2006 Issue - TRUTH
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  • What do we know to be true, and how do we know it?
  • What are the different ways in which truth can be known?
  • How do worldview and context play into the way we perceive truth?
  • Is all truth from God? Does it all hold the same authority?
  • What is the nature of truth and what can be known?
  • Which ministerial realities will never change, and what things should we hold more lightly?

If you have article ideas on this theme, write January/February 2006 Proposal in the e-mail subject field, and send an outline and opening paragraph within the e-mail body by August 15, 2005 to proposals@youthworker.com. You'll receive a reply no later than December 1, 2005.

To improve the chances of being published, we encourage you to check out our writer's guidelines at www.youthworker.com/writers_guidelines.php

Sunday, June 26, 2005

Writing Op - MORE Cup of Comfort



Cup of Comfort

Writers' Guidelines:
http://www.cupofcomfort.com/share.htm
Do you have the next Cup of Comfort story brewing in your life???
  • Adoptive Families
  • Animal Lovers
  • Bereaved
  • Blended Families
  • Fathers and Daughters
  • Midlife Women
  • Parents of Children with ADHD
  • Seniors
  • Singles
  • Working Moms