I know Danny but we’ll keep lying that we’re Spartacus every time you (beep) the literary bed cos we proper love you
Yeah, a coach is different from an editor - its more about giving you the space to find your own way through to the writer you want to be. (I say that with a big caveat - often writing mentors do seem more focussed on the critique and editing cycle rather than the coaching cycle) so they shouldn’t come at it with a ‘you‘re wrong’ attitude. Which isn’t to say they shouldn’t ask challenging questions of you and your practice - they should - but coaching should give you the space to decide how you want to develop from your own responses to those questions.One thing about the things she said: she was saying them without even reading any of your manuscript. And they were just the type of things that so often depend on the execution ... which is what she couldn't comment on without reading what you have written so far (much less what you have left to write). Professional advice can be valuable, but it has to be of the right sort at the right time.
From what you have said, shamguy, she doesn't sound that much like a writing coach, who I assume ought to be encouraging you to write and hoping you get past any blocks in your progress. I'm not sure what she is trying to do, but it doesn't sound like that. But Jo is the one who would know more about that than I do.
anyways she wanted $350 a session which was way out of my price range.
Recently, on a Facebook group a person reached out to me and asked if I would be interested in having a writing coach. The first session would be free. I figured it couldn’t hurt. Why not?
She asked me if I would be traditionally publishing or self publishing and I said I have not gotten there yet. However I graduated in graphic design and know how to use inDesign seriously so I might give self publishing a try. I also know where I can hire some illustrators for the cover.
At this she almost died of laughter as she bounced up and down on her chair that squeaked away in agreement. The very idea of me trying to self publish! Now there's a good laugh!
"Sweety! If you want to be part of the professional world of writing you better hire someone to do the publishing for you. You can self publish, but please hire a professional. I'm just trying to help you here." She said, her face full of sadness and sympathy. "You don't want your book and cover to look like what I see in those... those silly forums and facebook groups!"
This is a complete con.
Standard stuff. Offer a freebie in which you set out to destroy the punter's self-belief so she/he will beg for help and fork out loads of cash.
Having used a POD service: they tend to gush about how great everything you have is and how well it will do after they polish it for you. They make you feel good about it so that you will buy one of their publishing packages.This on face-value is actually TERRIBLE advice, because 'hiring someone to do the publishing for you' is vanity publishing at worst or at best more a far more expensive route than necessary. As a self-publisher, you may be better off hiring people for specific tasks like editing, cover design, and typesetting. There's a difference between being a brilliant illustrator and knowing how to design the illustration around the titles for example. But that's all further down the road if you choose that route.
When it comes to plot holes or just areas in my story where I’m unsure how to close the gap, do you suggest just pretending I know what happens and just write whatever comes to my head until I land on something better?
I normally try going back-and-forth between plotting and writing, plotting and writing. Sometimes though I cannot figure out what comes next and I do more plotting than writing. Sometimes this leads to a month of no writing and falling out of it is terrible. When I start writing again it’s like trying to climb a large mountain.
This is a complete con.
Standard stuff. Offer a freebie in which you set out to destroy the punter's self-belief so she/he will beg for help and fork out loads of cash.
When it comes to plot holes or just areas in my story where I’m unsure how to close the gap, do you suggest just pretending I know what happens and just write whatever comes to my head until I land on something better?
I normally try going back-and-forth between plotting and writing, plotting and writing. Sometimes though I cannot figure out what comes next and I do more plotting than writing. Sometimes this leads to a month of no writing and falling out of it is terrible. When I start writing again it’s like trying to climb a large mountain.
This woman was suppose to magically tell me the words I needed to hear that would solve all my problems!! For $350! Sigh....
That being said, the conventional publishing world is very limited to "what will sell." Now, maybe this woman you talked to is more knowledgeable about "what will sell" because she has books that were published. However, not all writers and artists have a vision that aligns with "what will sell." To me, it sounds very much like this writing coach only cared about a project that would "make it" in a traditional publishing arena. As a lot of writers and avid readers go the traditional publishing field is very competitive, kind of narrow, and hard to get a foot in the door with something new, cutting edge, or remotely different.
Thread starter | Similar threads | Forum | Replies | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
Agent Meeting Experience | Publishing | 45 | ||
Meeting at an inn: Take two (1266 words) | Critiques | 7 | ||
Meeting at an inn | Critiques | 46 | ||
Meeting Sir Francis | Critiques | 11 | ||
B | The pitch meeting for series 8 of GoT - Spoilers obviously | Game of Thrones | 2 |