Tag Archives: inspiration

Tomorrow We Spy teasers!

I’m still working on edits for Tomorrow We Spy, but it’s time to start getting pumped for this book! I’ve been living with it for so long—the first ideas came to me as I was finishing I, Spy, so I’ve had it with me over two years.

So, here are just a few of my favorite images and articles I’ve come across while working on this book. Can you wait??

The images below will only show on my website, so be sure to click through to see them!



Wait, what? You wanted me to explain what they mean? <evil laugh> That’s why you read the book 😉

I keep my inspiration images on my For My Books Pinterest board, so if you want a sneak peek inside my projects, be sure to follow it!

Staying Inspired

Today my friend Emily Gray Clawson is sharing great tips on staying inspired about your WIP! Also: it’s the last day to enter to win an ARC of Spy Noon!

Staying Inspired

by Emily Gray Clawson

Sometimes it seems that writing (at least drafting) is a giant shot in the dark. No matter how well one manages to outline their story, inevitably you get to a point where you start to question everything. At least I do. I wonder if my characters are relatable, if my conflict is gripping enough, if my motivations make sense, and if I am ever, in a million years, going to be able to pull this off.

As soon as I reach that questioning point there is usually this little monster that sits on my shoulder and starts whispering in my ear. He says things like, “You should just give up on this one. It’s unfixable.” Or maybe, “Doesn’t a Downton Abbey marathon sound like SO much more fun?”

Even if the answer to that last question is a resounding, “YES,” there are methods I have found to help me push through and stay invested in my manuscript clear to that wonderful moment of typing “THE END.”

Begin with the end in mind
Even if you are a pantster, it is oh, so helpful, no, crucial, to know where you are trying to end up. Keeping that beautiful moment of resolution painted clearly in your mind’s eye is helpful when the middle doldrums get you down. When you hit a section of your book that seems unbeatable, with no way through, try skipping the scene entirely and moving ahead to a point of the story that inspires you. Shannon Hale talks about writing the “big money scenes” first, then going back and trying to connect them all in the most succinct way possible. That will help with your interest as a writer, and will definitely be a great way to keep your readers engaged.

Create an inspiration board
Whether it’s on Pinterest or taped to your wall by your desk, a collection of inspiration photos and quotes can sometimes be the thing to keep your creative wheels spinning. This suggestion comes with a caution, though. If your writing time is all spent in adding things to your inspiration board, you’re in trouble. Use it sparingly and only collect those things that are the most evocative.

Write in public
It may sound crazy, and this may not work for everyone, but I often find that the simple act of being around other people can increase my creative energy and re-inspire me. Whether it’s at a library, book store, cafĂ©, or even the park, the energy and sheer quality of people-watching inspiration, is often all I need to give me that extra oomph of creative power.

Share a favorite scene with an appreciate friend
And I mean, in person, so you can see their reactions. Pick someone who is good at enjoying your work and then invite them over for a live reading. This can be such balm for the lonely writer’s soul and help you to fall in love with your characters again. After all, you get to see your creations through new eyes. This can also offer the bonus of helping you problem solve. You may see that the real reason you’re struggling, is that something is lacking. Reading out loud to a trusted friend, can help you work through those problems and fill in the gaps. Note: drafting is not usually the time to have your work critiqued. Pick someone who will “ooh and aah” appreciatively, maybe asking probing questions. In other words, don’t invite your mother-in-law over.

Write Badly
Just as I mentioned above, drafting is not the time to be fixing the little problems. This is big picture, unloading-your-building-materials time. Don’t be concerning yourself with nuances of grammar or even worrying about motivations working in every scene. Get the general story down, find your characters’ voices, and create the foundation for a story. Giving yourself permission to write badly is crucial. You will edit later. You will revise later. You will rewrite later. Don’t worry about that now. Just write as badly as needed to get through that first draft.

There are plenty of other ways to stay motivated but these work for me. In fact, writing this post has helped re-inspire me to get back to work on my manuscript. I hope it does the same for you!

About the author
emilyEmily Gray Clawson is the author of A Way Back to You and the Of Great Value series. She is co-author of Jennifer Graves’s memoir of the Susan Powell tragedy entitled A Light in Dark Places. Emily also runs a youth leadership program, and she’s an incredible critique partner!

I, Spy bonus features!

Every month on my newsletter, I try to share a bonus feature or two from I, Spy and/or Mr. Nice Spy. Personally, I love seeing what went into a book: deleted scenes, the character creation process, the inspiration, everything! So I try to share that with my friends and readers.

I, Spy coverOf course, I totally neglected to mention that stuff on the blog (whoops), so here’s my apology (sorry!) and links to that awesome content (so far):

The Very First Line! (audio)
I recorded the first line and some notes for the first chapter of I, Spy about two weeks before I started writing. Check it out!

The Original I, Spy Pitch
A video I made as an example of how to pitch a book to an agent—or the very first draft of the back cover copy 😉 .

Ask a Spy Novelist Videos
If you followed along with the blog tour, you’ve probably seen these, but as part of the blog tour, I solved readers’ problems using spy skills I’ve learned in my research. Fun, funny, silly—but (mostly) real stuff!

Mr. Nice Spy Planning Sheet
I always plot on paper for the tactile feedback of pen to paper. Here’s a shot of the first half of paper version of the novella plot line. Good luck reading my handwriting!

The Evolution of Elliott
One of the main characters of I, Spy, Elliott, changed a lot in the revision process. Check out why and how he changed, with a before-and-after comparison!

There are a few more features on there that I’ve already mentioned on the blog (and several guest posts and interviews I need to get linked up!), but if you want to keep up with all the updates you should probably join my newsletter. Just sayin’ 😉 .

What kind of bonus material do you like to see for a novel? Do you have bonus features, or are you saving material for them? What do you think?

Where does your inspiration come from?

This entry is part 6 of 14 in the series My writing journey

After five years of not really writing, I kind of figured I’d come back to writing much later. It became one of those someday plans, that I half expected not to come true.

By this time I’d gone from a college student to a work-at-home mom of one, aged eighteen months. And despite taking care of my son and working in Internet marketing, I was pretty darn bored a lot of the time.

Until I had a dream.

The dream itself was pretty bizarre. I don’t remember a whole lot about it, but it seemed to be inspired by the ’70s version of The Great Gatsby. Only with horror, because the only actual event in the dream was blood dripping from the ceiling of an ornate, grandiose house.

As cool as that story element would be, it had nothing to do with the story I started the next day. It was more the characters and the Roaring Twenties setting that inspired me to start what would become my first completed novel* the next day.

I figured I spent enough time on the computer, and I needed to be there for my son, and maybe the charm of the setting also appealed to me—because I decided to write it longhand. After four feverish weeks of writing, I finished a short novel. As I typed it up, I restructured one of the chapters pretty majorly and thought I was pretty dang awesome 😉 . That was “editing” in those days.

I was proud of it at the time, but I think I showed it to two people, my sister-in-law and my best friend (one of my high school writing friends). Their encouragement—and another dream featuring one of them—was enough to push me on to my next project.

And a writer was born!

You know, sort of.

Where does your inspiration come from? What prompted your first novel? Come share!

*So technically, this novel is far short of the word count of a typical novel, but I count it anyway.

Photo credits: dreaming person & cat—MooBob42; dream bracelet—Jake Belluchi

NaNo “Pinspiration”

Hooray! It’s day two! I hope you’re going strong. Throughout the rest of the month, we’ll look at a few tools, tips and techniques to keep us going strong, including things we can do in about 20 minutes to help remind us why we started this story, and fall in love with it all over again.

One recommendation I’ve seen several places is to make yourself a collage of images that speak to you about this book. Several people say that you can look at these collages for inspiration when you find your writing lagging. I love seeing these collage posts on friends’ blogs, but today I’m talking about a different way to do this.

Have you heard of Pinterest? It’s a website where you can virtually “pin” (save) any image or video that inspires you. It also shares these pins with your friends and displays them all organized into separate “boards.” It’s pretty fun. I use it a lot for my craft blog, but every once in a while, I use it for writing.

Now, my friends’ collages are a little more abstract, it seems, but this is my interpretation: some images of character inspirations and major plot elements (okay, and at least one character quirk) in my Nano 2011 WIP:

(I edited out the pictures from the previous couple projects, but the pins are still in there if you follow the link.)

You no longer need an invite to sign up! You can also use your Twitter account or Facebook account to register at Pinterest.

Again, this year, I’m trying out Scrivener for Nano. I really love that you can save your research and even character and inspiration photos right in your project file. It’s also a plus for me that this is private, where Pinterest doesn’t offer private pinboards. However, I also like Pinterest’s one-click capability to add any picture to my boards. So we’ll see what I end up using long term.

How do you make collages for your WIPs? Or do you?

NaNo inspiration: covers

Happy Halloween! Let’s keep counting down to Nano with some more sources of inspiration!

Once upon a time, I was anti-mock covers. I thought it was a little weird to put up a fake book cover on your site for a book you’re drafting or trying to sell. Then I wrote up my projects page, and it looked . . . bare. So I made up some passable mock covers (some obviously more time consuming than others).

Usually, I’ve waited until I was done or nearly so to make these. But since October is a “planning” month for NaNo, and I was only doing 50,000 other things, I spent a day (or four) making the “ideal” version of the cover. Here’s last year’s:

Not 100% perfect (or, you know, licensed), but pretty dang good. Just looking at it gets me excited to write!

Obviously you don’t want to take off a day in the middle of NaNo to play around with a graphics program to make a cover no one else might ever see—but in about 20 minutes, you can throw together something that can inspire you.

Seriously, I tried it. I used a picture I pinned of one character, and Googled screencaps from a movie the other character was in (screencaps found here). Then I turned to Flickr for pictures of a rune stone (by Paul W. Locke). Some Magic Wand tool, cut/paste, resize, color balance, and add text, and voila! I put together a crude version of the above.

Inspiration in twenty minutes? That’s a bargain.

I’ll share the cover for this year’s Nano novel in December!

How do you find inspiration quickly?

Photo credits: Maggie Lawson by unknown (via listal), Garrett Hedlund from TRON: Legacy (found here), Viking coin by Ancient Art, Kensington runestone monument by Paul W. Locke

Using your web browser as a writing tool

It’s not just for research (and procrastinating) anymore!

Back in November, we ran a whole series on little ways to psych yourself up for your story. Since then, I’ve found another way I really like.

I recently switched my browser from Mozilla Firefox to Google Chrome. It’s a few months in and I’m still getting used to it, but there is at least one feature I really like: an add-on called Incredible StartPage. Whenever you open a new tab or empty web browser, it loads a set of links/information that you might need: your bookmarks, your Chrome apps, your recently closed tabs, a set of notepads, links to your email and calendar, and a picture.

You can use the default picture from Flickr, or you can set up a custom picture. I decided to set up my Incredible StartPage to help fire me up to write. Since I like making covers for my WIPs, I resized the cover for the book I was writing or revising at the time:

Notice the little note to self: Shouldn’t you be working? It shows up every time I open another tab for more research.

There are lots of other ways to use your browser to get you back to writing. When I was on Firefox, I used an extension called LeechBlock to limit the time I spent on time-sucking websites. I loved how flexible it was: you could allot yourself a certain number of minutes per hour to use your web-based email or social networking sites (you specify which sites to block!), pick the days of the week, select the time of day, or block certain sites altogether!

I haven’t tried any of the similar apps in Chrome, but StayFocusd comes highly recommended.

What little tricks do you use to get excited for your story every day?

PS: a special reveal today. This month as part of the Authors Incognito March-a-thon, I set a goal to write a new book. And of course, I made a cover. So here’s a tiny peek at the book I should be finishing tomorrow!

Because I can

Okay, yes, (hooray!) I have a book coming out (in a while). But I just like to make covers.

So this is NOT OFFICIAL, NOT MY REAL BOOK COVER, JUST SOMETHING I DID FOR FUN, but I made a book cover. Because I can.

Just what I need for that little extra burst of motivation and inspiration for the next round of edits!

This is the book that was accepted, coming out next year. It is not an official cover. It’s not even the official title. (If you want, you can read more about the LDS FBI agent undercover as a Catholic priest in the excerpt from the first chapter.)

The actors here are physical models I (loosely) used for my characters, although they’re still a few years older than my characters are. Not too bad, since they started out ten to fifteen years older. But Photoshop (well, Paint.net) can only do so much.

Altar photo (behind the title) by H. W. Morse