A Need to Support My Writing Habit

Writing Habit
Writing Life

When I started writing, I thought I’d to make some money, but that hasn’t happened yet. Maybe I have the wrong attitude. Maybe I don’t care enough about money. No, really, I love to live comfortably, have plenty to eat, a decent car to drive, go shopping now and then. I do like finding pretty, unusual clothes at thrift shops. Still as long as my basic needs are overmet, I don’t get too concerned about making a lot of money as such.

But I have to write. I could stay in my journals, and I would if I had no other outlet, but I do like communicating with all of you—very much. I love writing novels, too. I heard an Indie writer speak one time who had distributed 40,000 of his novels. I didn’t say sold. I don’t know the stats on that, but I do know by now that a person has to work pretty hard to get rid of that many novels, no matter how bad or how good he is. Even the big writers work hard at publicity and marketing. In order to sell books, you have to become known. Sometimes being known can cost money as well as time, energy and effort.

I pay an editor to edit and format my books. I believe most Indie writers do. It doesn’t cost me too, too much to keep ahead, but it does mean I need to make up my mind there will be expenses. And sometimes I wonder whether I’m worth it, or whether I’m really called or whether I’m wasting time and money and putting on airs. But I can’t quit now.

I did try to quit several times. I gave it all up to the Lord, (all except the journaling, and oh, yes, well, poems always came, and I wrote emails and before that nice satisfying letters to send in envelopes, and come to think of it, there were those editing jobs, and the newsletters…but I didn’t consider any of that being published).

Three of the most satisfying things I wrote never made any money at all. One was a poem for a young woman who wanted to send it to a boy she liked, one was an employee who wanted to send a letter to his boss about being suspended from his job, but who lacked confidence in his English. After I wrote the letter, he went back to work. I’m not saying it was because of me, but still, it was good to be part of a successful scribe story. The third was a letter to a judge. We have a couple at church who takes care of a brother and sister who are the man’s cousins. Their parents have been incarcerated for most of their lives. When the mom was released from jail many years later, she took our friends to court to get custody of her children. The friend at church asked if I could write a letter saying he was doing a good job, and it didn’t seem wise to make that change. The kids got to stay.

I’m going to keep on writing as long as I can. Someday I may get a big surprise and turn into a millionaire from it, but possibly not. As long as I feel I’m where I’m supposed to be in my writing I will spend what is necessary to spend. I’ve always felt that we are all teachers. I think God wants us to teach the good news in various ways—the more politely and entertainingly, the better.

I’ve talked to writer friends. One’s supports her writing habit as a court translator. Another works full time at a job she doesn’t like and writes on holidays and vacations. Someone else does editing for pay and, in order to keep her habit going, writes books for publications such as Facts on File, even though her first love is poetry and she’s an imaginative and wonderful writer.

How about you? How do you support your habit? If we’re called to write, and I believe we are, our Holy Spirit will bless us and show us favor. He will supply all our needs according to His riches in glory. After all, maybe it’s not just a pastime or a habit, maybe sometimes it will help people to find the loving Father they’ve been looking for, and that’s when it become something more than our need or a habit, it becomes putting our hands into the hand of God and following where he leads and where he supplies.

Two Bestsellers!!

B r e a k i n g  N e w s

We are incredibly blessed and pleased to announce  Rebekah Lyn Books has TWO  Amazon 

BESTSELLERS!! 

Clear Spring by DiVoran Lites is currently #5 in Free Christian Romance

Summer Storms by me, Rebekah Lyn is currently at #4 in paid Inspirational Romance

If you would like to pick them up while they are on sale, click the covers below. Sale ends at midnight 1/27/14

The Light Comes On

Bad Review
Writing Life

Over the past few months, while I’ve been working on my novels, for the Florida Springs Trilogy, I’ve had many questions. Along the way, I pondered what makes a good path for excellent writing, and how to use my word processing program to help me along that path. I offer three of my musing for your delectation.

  1. What trigger can alert me that I’m writing myself into a passive voice?
  2. How can I disable spell/grammar checker’s correction about a single rule, one that I wish to ignore maybe forever?
  3. Is my spell/ grammar checker always right? I already knew the answer to that one. A friend sent me a funny list of things the computer thinks are right, but are not, and vice-versa. Today, however, I experienced a delightful example, so I want to share it with you.

A writer’s blog on polishing your own work helped with the first question. Look for the ings, it said, when you have an ing you may have a was or an is making the sentence passive. Suddenly I moved ahead. (Not suddenly, I was moving ahead.)

The next answer came from one of my mistakes. I polished away blithely clicking on the Ignore Rule unaware that I had shut off some of the suggestions for that document permanently. That works. If you don’t want contractions click on Ignore Rule. Novelists, who want their writing to sound casual, and to move the reader along, often go ahead and use contractions.

My example for the spell checker’s sometime frivolous pronouncements follows: in my poem, Woodrat the title had a red line under it. The top choice for a correction was woo drat. Since I don’t know what a woo drat is and don’t much care, I kept woodrat, even though it wasn’t strictly correct. After all, it is my poem.

When I was almost home, the sun shone suddenly in my eyes. As I slipped my sunglasses from my pocket, I realized that the Holy Spirit who lives in me knows all about writing and everything else. He answers when I ask for His help with the smallest, seemingly most unimportant matters. In other words, the light always goes on, sometimes immediately, sometimes later. I rejoice.

I also take suggestion from people. Do you have any? Please be gentle. Please, don’t tell me about commas. I have an exterior editor for that.

Arise; shine, for your light has come. Isaiah 60:1

The One and Only Bookstore in Town

The Book Rack The Book Rack is Titusville’s only real bookstore. It sits on a corner in historical, down town. Businesses come and go here, but Lynne, the proprietor, has been tending to book needs for ten years and counting. The store draws customers from the nearby marina; and since they arrive in their boats, they have no other means of transportation, except walking or biking. Lynne’s place is a godsend to them. Street parties bring people in, as have spacecraft launches for many years. Now the Titusville Book Rack is the bookstore of choice for nearby small towns such as Christmas, on the other side of the St. John’s River and Mims to the North. Day-trippers drop in too.

When asked why she decided to open a brick and mortar bookstore, Lynne said it had always been her dream. The fulfillment of that dream was in the timing. First, she grew up in small town Titusville and couldn’t wait to see the larger world beyond. During a building boom, she lived in Houston, and later, Clearwater, a part of the St. Petersburg sprawl. Twenty-five years after she left, family drew her home again. By that time, the Space Coast was all right with her. As her husband said, “It doesn’t matter where you live as long as you’re with the one you love.” To Lynne that was exactly right, so she and the one she loved started looking around for a way to make a living. At that time, there was not a single bookstore in Titusville. Oh, you could drive an hour to a big-box store in another town, but Titusville had nothing except the small selection of new books at Wal-Mart. Lynne wanted to carry used books as well. She loved them all.

The Book Rack is housed in a vintage downtown building at 346 Washington Avenue. If you happen to be on I-95 near Titusville, and an irresistible urge for a book comes over you, take the I-95 Garden Street exit, drive east to Highway One, turn south and keep going until you come to a restored Victorian mansion in the historic downtown area. The Book Rack is on the same side of the street, and you may pull into the municipal parking lot between them and park free.

Lynne carries a variety of books, both new and used. If she’s not too busy, she loves to chat with customers.

Before she bought the store, people she talked to thought she might get time to read on the job, but that didn’t happen. She’s interested in people’s reading habits, though. She’s impressed with our own Onisha who has a want-to-read list of over four hundred books, and Lynne has customers who read a book a day.

Lynne still has bookstore dreams. For one thing, she’d like to have invitation only readings by some of her local authors. Soon she’ll be heading to the big city to stock up on books she knows her customers will like.

Excuse me for mentioning this, I know the story is about Lynne and The Titusville Book Rack, but in case you’re looking for them, Lynne stocks Rebekah Lyn’s Julianne, Winter’s End, and Summer Storms. She also has my Florida Springs Trilogy: Sacred Spring, Living Spring, and Clear Spring. Who knows, maybe we’ll get to have readings in the Book Rack one of these days. We’ll let you know if we do.

Like to support independent book stores? Click here to like The Book Rack Facebook page.