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January 4, 2010 By Anne R. Allen 4 Comments

WORD COUNT GUIDELINES UPDATED FOR THE NEW DECADE

WORD COUNT GUIDELINES UPDATED FOR THE NEW DECADE

How Long Should A Novel Be? by Anne R. Allen A lot of agents have been complaining about queries with inappropriate word counts recently. If you’re getting a lot of form rejections, this may be why. Today Fineprint agent Colleen Lindsay has posted an update of contemporary word count rules on her great blog, THE […]

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Filed Under: The Publishing Business, Writing Craft Tagged With: publishing rules

December 6, 2009 By Anne R. Allen 1 Comment

Catherine Ryan Hyde on YA vs. Adult

Catherine Ryan Hyde on YA vs. Adult

There’s been some discussion on other blogs about some of my statements about how publishers label things. Please know I’m just the messenger—I don’t condone those one-size-fits-all categories any more than other writers. Catherine Ryan Hyde, author of Pay it Forward weighed in by directing me to a blogpost in her blog archives about the […]

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Filed Under: The Publishing Business, Writers Dealing with Reviews and Rejection, Writing Craft Tagged With: publishing rules

December 4, 2009 By Anne R. Allen 7 Comments

ARE TEEN GIRLS THE NEW LITERATI?

ARE TEEN GIRLS THE NEW LITERATI?

  by Anne R. Allen   Young Adult and Middle Grade are fast becoming the dominant genres for new fiction. I heard at a writers’ conference recently that one publishing house has fired most of its adult fiction editorial staff and replaced them with YA/MG editors. Many of our most creative authors are now penning […]

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Filed Under: The Publishing Business

November 28, 2009 By Anne R. Allen 8 Comments

LET’S PLAY “WHAT’S MY GENRE?”

by Anne R. Allen   Yeah, I know. We all hate labels. But if our ultimate goal is space on a bookstore shelf, we have to be able to suggest to an agent or editor what shelf that might be. The best place to start is an actual bookstore. Find books like yours and see […]

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Filed Under: The Publishing Business

November 22, 2009 By Anne R. Allen 9 Comments

LITERARY OR GENRE?

LITERARY OR GENRE?

by Anne R. Allen   Hundreds of folks weighed in on the great literary vs. genre debate on Nathan Bransford’s blog last month (He says good writers need to read both. I agree.) A few days later, in a Writers Chronicle thread more writers debated the subject. But nothing much got resolved—I think because the […]

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Filed Under: The Publishing Business, The Writing Life Tagged With: advice for writers

November 15, 2009 By Anne R. Allen 5 Comments

Do You Write “New Adult” Fiction?

by Anne R. Allen   There’s a new fiction genre in the publishing world: “New Adult.” This means books for single people 18-30. According to author S. Jae-Jones’ recent blogpost it includes most of the hipper literary works of the past couple of decades, plus the now defunct (just whisper it) chick lit. Her list […]

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Filed Under: The Publishing Business Tagged With: publishing news

October 23, 2009 By Anne R. Allen 8 Comments

SHOULD YOU REWRITE WITHOUT A CONTRACT?

SHOULD YOU REWRITE WITHOUT A CONTRACT?

by Anne R. Allen   If you’re a diligent, talented writer who’s done your homework—and you have the good-luck fairy on speed-dial—sometime during your novel querying process, your phone will ring and you’ll hear the voice of an agent—a real, honest-to-goodness publishing industry professional—who’s impressed enough to spend money and time ringing up little old […]

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Filed Under: The Publishing Business Tagged With: advice for writers

August 1, 2009 By Anne R. Allen 8 Comments

YOU MAY BE A BESTSELLING AUTHOR ON TRALFAMADORE

YOU MAY BE A BESTSELLING AUTHOR ON TRALFAMADORE

by Anne R. Allen   This week, agent Nathan Bransford posed this question on his blog: “How Do You Deal with the ‘Am-I-Crazies’?” Those are the blues that can overwhelm the unpublished/underpublished novelist as we slog away, year after year, with nothing to show for our life’s work but a mini-Kilimanjaro of rejection slips. The […]

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Filed Under: The Writing Life Tagged With: writing humor

July 24, 2009 By Anne R. Allen 12 Comments

5 Tips on How to Query the Right Agent

5 Tips on How to Query the Right Agent

by Anne R. Allen     Recently I cautioned against scam agents, but also noted that the ratio of legit agents to newbie novelists is approximately one to twenty-five gazillion. So what do we do—throw mass queries at big-name agents, perhaps employing the services of a Mafia henchperson or Voodoo practitioner? That would be a […]

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Filed Under: The Publishing Business, Writers Dealing with Reviews and Rejection Tagged With: advice for writers

July 11, 2009 By Anne R. Allen 20 Comments

Beware Bogus Literary Agents

Six Tips to Avoid Getting Scammed by Anne R. Allen   I belong to the generation of women who were told we were more likely be shot by terrorists than find husbands. Several decades later, we’re all writing books about our fabulous single lives—as desperate now for literary representation as we once were for the […]

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Filed Under: Scams and Alerts for Writers Tagged With: advice for writers

July 4, 2009 By Anne R. Allen 13 Comments

Everybody’s a Critic: dealing with unsolicited criticism

Everybody’s a Critic: dealing with unsolicited criticism

by Anne R. Allen   Early into our journeys in wordsmithing, most writers discover our chosen art form has a major drawback: everybody’s a *&@! critic. For some reason, folks who happily offer praise to fledgling musicians, quilters, sculptors, or Star Trek action-figurine painters, feel compelled to launch into scathing critiques of the efforts of […]

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Filed Under: Writers Dealing with Reviews and Rejection

June 26, 2009 By Anne R. Allen 4 Comments

I Do Not Have Time to Read This Crap

This is one of my most pirated columns from Inkwell Newswatch. I’ve found copied on dozens of other blogs. (I’m flattered, pirates, as long as you give me attribution.) I wrote it in May of 2005, when I was working for an indie publisher in the UK, now defunct, but the principles remain the same. […]

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Filed Under: The Publishing Business, Writing Craft

June 20, 2009 By Anne R. Allen 5 Comments

Do You Need to Attend Writers’ Conferences?

Do You Need to Attend Writers’ Conferences?

by Anne R. Allen   I’m starting to pull my old columns from the INkwell Newswatch archives. I hope to post updated versions here for the next few months. This is from June 2007, in response to lots of questions I was getting about the necessity of attending conferences. Writers’ Conferences–the INside Scoop Writers’ Conference […]

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Filed Under: The Publishing Business, The Writing Life Tagged With: Central Coast Writers Conference, writers conferences

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Anne R. AllenAnne R. Allen writes funny mysteries and how-to-books for writers. She also writes poetry and short stories on occasion. She’s a contributor to Writer’s Digest and the Novel and Short Story Writer’s Market.

Her bestselling Camilla Randall Mystery Series features perennially down-on-her-luck former socialite Camilla Randall—who is a magnet for murder, mayhem and Mr. Wrong, but always solves the mystery in her quirky, but oh-so-polite way.

Ruth Harris NYT best selling authorRuth is a million-copy New York Times bestselling author, Romantic Times award winner, former Big 5 editor, publisher, and news junkie.

Her emotional, entertaining women’s fiction and critically praised novels have sold millions of copies in hard cover, paperback and ebook editions, been translated into 19 languages, sold in 30 countries, and were prominent selections of leading book clubs including the Literary Guild and the Book Of The Month Club.

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