Nov
16
2008
0

Death of the Book - Not Yet

Being an author, I love books, although it seems somewhat axiomatic to say so. I enjoy holding them in my hands, turning the pages and diving into the world that the writer has created for us. That being said, with the advent of e-book readers the world of books as we know it is changing. There may, one day, be no page to turn, except in a virtual sense.  Now, some people I know are actively against using an e-book reader, but I will admit that I can’t wait to have my own Kindle.

My reasons are simple, yet many. I really like the aspect of being able to carry an entire library around with you in the size of a single paperback and not even the same weight in most cases. With the Kindle as well, there is the ease of downloading new material pretty quickly. I can shop, preview the material and have it as soon as I need it. No having to wait to get home from the store or if you are the point and click variety of shopper like I am, no waiting for the book to ship. That’s another plus, no shipping costs. Since I have severe dust allergies, an e-book reader removes the factor of dust caused by page decomposition over the years, plus the amount of dust that collects (and so quickly too) on the number of books that I own.  The reduction of the carbon footprint is also a draw; fewer trees will be needed to produce paper, fewer chemicals will be processed to make the ink, warehousing requirements are reduced or eliminated.  Theoretically, that should mean either an increase profit margin to the publishing company who should then share the wealth with the author, or pass the savings along to the customer, or a combination.

Although the e-book concept has not yet caught on as much as some would have hoped, I believe that it is an idea that will continue to grow in popularity until the majority of books which are published will be published in printed and e-book format, and will continue along the spectrum until the e-book is the given publication and the publisher will consider whether or not to go to the expense of the printed book.  Until the e-book reader format has been improved to provide a full color page capability, there will be a segment of books for which the e-book format is not practical.

Once the full color e-book reader has been established, will that then mean the death of the book?  Will it be within our lifetime that printed books become a memory?  While no one can answer that with any degree of accuracy, my bet is that there will be fewer and fewer printed books over time and an increase in e-books.  But, until Fisher Price, or another company of that ilk comes up with a relatively inexpensive, indestructible e-book reader for children, printed books will be alive and well in the Children’s section of your virtual bookstore.
———————————————————————————————–

LK Gardner-Griffie
Visit me at Griffie World
To buy Misfit McCabe, visit my store at Lulu.com or purchase at Amazon.com
To track Misfit McCabe across the country, visit:
Where in the World is Misfit McCabe?

Own a Kindle? Download Misfit McCabe in an instant.
To read book reviews by LK Gardner-Griffie, visit: The Lulu Book Review

Aug
20
2008
0

Perspective

Interesting happening today (well to me anyway). Last night I wrote and posted an article on Author’s Den about the Lulu Book Review site. The intent of the article was to make the author’s at Author’s Den aware of the site. When you are a POD (print on demand) author, it is sometimes difficult to get a review for your work. I was very pleased to find this site, especially since it looks so well put together and already a lot of information is appearing on it for such a new site.

Anyway, the intent of the article was to hopefully entice some authors to take a look at the site and maybe, if they felt it was right for them, to submit their own work for review. Let me make very clear, that I am not affilitated with the Lulu Book Review site in any way at this time, and was simply helping someone who is helping out authors (as I see it).

Wouldn’t you know, but the first comment posted to the article was by someone who advised that they personally would not use the review site because there are so many nasty people out there, and if you get a bad review it sticks like mud.

Well, I did post a response back to that, but here is my candid response. If the person posting the comment had actually look at the site and read some of the reviews (as was my recommendation in the article), then they might have noticed that the reviews on the site are positive, and in fact there is a post stating that no negative commnets would be posted to the site. A little ironic perhaps that a person cautioning against negativity is doing so in a negative fashion.

I would expect that anyone who would submit their work for review would first do an assessment of the review site, because not every review site is for every author. you need to make sure that you are submitting your work to a party who appreciates/reads your genre. For example, I would NEVER submit my work to a site which had an emphasis on romance/erotica because that is not what I write. Generally the people reviewing those do not necessarily read Young Adult, which is my main area.

Now to work.
———————————————————————————————–

LK Gardner-Griffie
Visit me at Griffie World
To buy Misfit McCabe, visit my store at Lulu.com or purchase at Amazon.com
To track Misfit McCabe across the country, visit:
Where in the World is Misfit McCabe?

Own a Kindle? Download Misfit McCabe in an instant.
To read book reviews by LK Gardner-Griffie, visit: The Lulu Book Review

Aug
18
2008
0

Article: The Birth of a Character

When you are writing a story, one of the most important elements of the story is the characters it contains. Without interesting characters to help drive your story forward, the reader will lose interest and stop reading. Henry James, one of the founders and leaders in the realism school of fiction, went as far as to say, “Character is plot.” Since character is so important to writing a story, how do we make the characters in the story come alive on the page for the reader?
You can bring your character to life by:

  • The things they do.
  • The things they say.
  • The things they think.
  • They way they look.
  • Gestures they use.
  • Their reactions to other characters.

If you only use a couple of the above methods to help bring your character to life, you are missing a chance to make them as complex and individual as real people, and as a consequence your reader will not care about the character as much. Let’s take a closer look at each of these 6 elements which help reveal the characters to the reader.

The Things They Do

A character reveals themself by the things that they do. The expression “actions speak louder than words” is especially true for character development. Your character can say one thing, but then act in a completely contradictory manner, just as people do in real life. Let’s see what Harvey reveals about himself in this excerpt from Misfit McCabe. Katie and Harvey have just arrived at the malt shop.

     Harvey was standing right behind me.     "What do you want to eat or drink?"     "Nothing, thanks. I don't have any money with me."  I felt somewhat self-conscious byhaving to say that, but I didn't want him to ask why. That would have been worse.     "I already fixed it with Max, so go ahead and order what you want."     "Thanks, Harvey." Maybe he did have a good side to him. I was a little surprised by itthough.

So Harvey has given Katie the impression that he would pay, and that she could order anything she wanted. But then later, when Katie was getting ready to leave with Tom because Harvey had already left:

     When we got to the door, a plate banged on the counter. "Hey! Where do you thinkyou're going?"  My head whipped around.  Max was leaning forward, his fists bunchedon the countertop.  He didn't look very happy either.  "You can't leave until you payfor the hamburger, fries, and malt."     "Pay for it?"  Tom had already paid for his, so this must be Harvey's petty little way ofgetting back at me for having hit him. "Harvey told me he would take care of it for me."  Ididn't even have a hamburger and fries.  He must have stuck me for both his and my bill.     Max frowned. "He told me when you walked through the door that you would bepaying the bill."  That little snake.

While this is a relatively minor incident in the course of the story, it reveals a lot about Harvey’s personality and character. While all 6 of the elements are necessary to create a fully developed character, emphasis on the actions of the character as a first priority will help make the character real to the reader. By putting the focus on the actions of the character, you are showing the reader who your character is rather than telling the reader, which is the goal of good characterization.

The Things They Say

In your classroom, in a restaurant, in a grocery store, and everywhere else you go, listen to the conversations around you. By listening to actual conversations, you will learn that no two people talk exactly alike. Each person has a distinct speech pattern that is all their own. What our characters say and how they say it reveal some of the qualities of their character, and can even reveal attitudes and current mood. Something as simple as expressing that the character is thirsty can be done in several different ways. Here are a few examples:

     "It's hot today. Would you mind if we stopped to get something to drink?"

     "Oooweee! I'm hotter'n bacon in a fryin' pan. I need a drink."

     "I'm sweatin' like a pig here, are we gonna stop for a drink, or what?"

     "Do you think I'm part camel? If I don't get a drink soon, I'll shrivel up."

Spend some time developing your character’s speech pattern. Think up different situations and figure out how your character would say certain things in that situation. It is important to be able to distinguish each character by the way that they speak to make them distinct. Use speech patterns, conversational style and diction (the accent, inflection, intonation, and speech-sound quality manifested by an individual speaker) to separate your characters.

The Things They Think

Thoughts enable the writer to further individualize their characters as long as the thoughts allow the character’s attitude to come through rather than just summarizing situations. For example, in Misfit McCabe, when Katie first meets Harvey Junior, her thoughts reveal that she doesn’t like Harvey from the start.

     He smoothed back his hair, which had fallen into his eyes again, before answering. "Ithought I'd take you to see my old man first. He owns the bank, and just about everythingelse in town." He sounded smug. I could tell he thought his father owning things made himimportant. Maybe he was, but to me he sounded like a weasel.

Just that one line where Katie thinks Harvey sounds like a weasel sets up the beginning of the conflict between them and leaves the reader with no doubt that she doesn’t like Harvey. A characters thoughts can also allow the reader a glimpse of the inner self of the character. By sharing the character’s most intimate thoughts, it brings the reader closer to the character and helps them care more about the character or dislike the character more when the character is unlikable.

     I wanted to be by myself so no one could bother me. A rock lay in my path, and I kickedit as hard as I could. I wanted to go home and have things back the way they were.  Athome I had friends, things to do, people who loved me.  Here, I had nothing. I didn't fit in.

In the above passage, Katie’s loneliness clearly comes through. She is not happy with where she is and is feeling isolated by her situation. A paragraph later we find out more about Katie’s state of mind.

     I missed my Daddy. I missed the strength of his arms hugging me, comforting me. Whywas this happening? I should have known he was sick, why didn't I see it?

Part of her isolated feeling comes from blaming herself for not recognizing that her Daddy was sick. Without this scene, her reactions to Sarah and Uncle Charley would make her seem like a spoiled brat, but since the reader knows that she is acting out her pain, her actions become a little more understandable.

The Way They Look

The way your character looks should not be limited to the physical characteristics of the character. While it is important to describe the physical characteristics, you can reveal more about your character’s personality by describing appearance factors that they can control than simply the physical appearance. What is meant by looks that the character can control? How do they dress? What is their level of cleanliness? Do they habitually carry an object? Consider a character who’s eyesight requires correction. Do they wear contacts? If they wear glasses, are they wire-frame, thick frame, broken frames that are taped together? What does the choice say about your character?

Elizabeth Peters has a series featuring a character named Amelia Peabody who is an Egyptologist, and she carries a parasol everywhere. The parasol is used not only to provide shade, but in the case of Amelia, she uses it as a weapon as well. She started carrying one when they were fashionable, but as the fashion changed, the parasol had become indispensable to the character, and she continues to carry it despite fashion.

It is easy to fall into stereotypes when developing characters, such as the beautiful blonde, the tall, dark stranger, and so on. When characters fall into stereotypes, they tend to become caricatures (any imitation or copy so distorted or inferior as to be ludicrous) rather than real characters. That doesn’t mean that you can’t have a blonde character who is beautiful, but you will want to establish some appearance issues outside of that stereotype to help make the character real to the reader.

Gestures They Use

Body language can be used to show character, mood, or attitudes. By describing the characters minor actions while speaking, the body language can add a different layer to the scene, or reinforce what is being said. Minor actions would be things like slouching while walking with hands in the pockets, staring into space, slumping down in a chair, smoothing the wrinkles out of clothing. Let’s take a couple of examples from Misfit McCabe of gestures to see how they convey meaning and add to the personality of the character.

     Placing his hands on his hips, his blue eyes pierced straight into mine.

The above description comes from the beginning of the book when Katie’s dad asks her what she had to do with burning down the shed and Katie was trying to bluff her way around it. The hands on hips gesture shows that her Daddy was upset and not going to put up with any of Katie’s nonsense, even without having the accompanying dialogue.

     "Stop right there and turn around and look at me."  There was a new demanding toneto her voice that irritated me even further.  I stopped and kicked my foot against theground.  Who was she to be ordering me around anyway?

While the surrounding words tell the reader that Katie is irritated, the kick of the foot against the ground shows the reader Katie’s petulance, coming close to temper tantrum, which reveals that Katie has anger control issues.

One of the methods I use to assist in interspersing gestures throughout the story is to visualize every scene. What does the character look like when they are talking? Are they doing anything with their hands? Does their hair need to be brushed out of their face? When your character is deeply perturbed, do they rub their forehead between their eyes, or start cracking their knuckles? Once you can “see” everything, you can then add enough gestures to the dialogue and thoughts to help move the story along, but not so many that the pace of the story becomes bogged down with too much description. You want your reader to get the flavor of the emotions without becoming bored by the description.

Reactions to Other Characters
When someone says or does something and we react to it, we are revealing information about ourselves. It works the same way for our characters, by the way they react to a situation, they reveal more of their personality to the reader. In the below excerpt from Misfit McCabe, Katie is returning to the shop with Harvey and expecting that Harvey will tell Sarah that Katie punched him.

     Sarah had her back to us as we entered the shop. "It's about time you two. I'll be with you in a minute." When she turned around, the smile of greeting quickly faded from her face and her hand flew up to her mouth. "My goodness Harvey, what on earth happened to your face?"     Now I'd get it. Harvey pulled himself up as tall as he could make himself, kind of a losing battle I thought, and looked like he was going to try and bluster his way through the story of what happened. "Some guys down by the lake started picking on Katie, and I tried to stop them." What? I couldn't believe my ears. "There were three of them and they started by making rude remarks and then things got worse. One of them started stroking her hair, even though she told them to stop and tried to walk away. Then another of the guys caught her and forced her to hug him. She was struggling to get away, so I grabbed one of their arms and then they all got mad. One of them held me with my arms behind my back while the other two started to hit me."     I just stared at Harvey. I think I was going into shock. "Katie started screaming, so they let go of me and ran off." I still couldn't believe it. I expected him to say right out that I hit him, and then sit back and watch me squirm.     "That's awful." Sarah took a closer look at his jaw. "Go on back to the office and let your mother take care of it. If she needs me to, I'll stay until she's had a chance to ice it to get the swelling down."     "No, you go ahead. I'll be all right."     Sarah still looked pretty horrified with the damage that was done. She turned to me. "Katie, are you okay?" Sarah seemed to believe the story, unbelievable as it was. Maybe I was off the hook after all. "Did you get the names of the boys who did this?"     I started to shake my head when Harvey decided to stick the knife in and twist it. "I think it was Tom Pike and his buddies. I'm not sure because I don't really know them that well, but I think it was them." My jaw dropped. What a filthy, rotten, lying, scumbag. No word I could think of was too bad for Harvey.     Sarah looked very concerned. "I know Tom, and that just doesn't sound like something he'd do. He's always seemed like a very nice, polite boy."     Harvey tried to give her a world-wise expression, but the swelling caused his face to twist into a grimace. "You'd be surprised how much he has changed now that he's on the varsity football squad. He thinks he can do anything he wants, just because he might be the starting quarterback this year."     Sarah put her arm across my shoulders and gave me a quick squeeze. "I'm so sorry that something like this had to happen on your first day in town. Uncle Charley will be very upset, and I wouldn't be surprised if he didn't go and visit Tom's parents."     This was getting worse and worse. "No. I'm fine. Really." I barely stammered the words out.     "Well, we'll talk about it later. I can't thank you enough Harvey for looking after Katie for us."     I was at a complete and total loss of how to start fixing this whole mess. If I had called Harvey out on his lie right at the beginning, it would have been better, but I was speechless. I didn't even know what to say. And then the little creep decided to throw Tom and his friends, who had been perfect gentlemen, unlike the slimy Harvey, into the mix and it felt like the whole thing was spiraling out of control. For once in my life, I wasn't getting into trouble for something I had done wrong, but this was even worse.?

Instead of telling Sarah that Katie punched him, Harvey lied. What was Katie’s initial reaction? Did she put the record straight immediately, or did she keep quiet in the hopes that she wouldn’t get into trouble? When Harvey saw that Katie was going to keep quiet and let the lie stand, his reaction was to extend the lie and blame Katie’s new friends. What does that say about Harvey’s character? To this continued lie, Katie had some choices, she could speak out and call Harvey a liar, or continue to keep quiet. Katie chose to continue to keep quiet, because she was still trying to figure out how to make the situation go away without getting herself into trouble. What does that say about Katie’s character?

So, before you can put a character on the page, you need to get to know the character; they need to be “alive” in your head. When writing Misfit McCabe, when I got to the part where Harvey entered the story, I started having some trouble writing. I didn’t have a good feel for who Harvey was, I just knew that I needed him as a character. It was like I could see him coming down the street, but didn’t know anything about him, and couldn’t see all of his features, he was just a figure in the distance. I spent a lot of time struggling to continue writing, but couldn’t get anywhere until I walked away and spent some time letting Harvey tell me who he was. Once I could “see” his hair hanging in his eyes, his shirt half untucked, and the beads of sweat across his upper lip, and could sense his underlying nastiness, I was able to return to the blank page and start writing again.

Once I was able to start writing about Harvey, more and more of his personality and character traits became apparent to me and his character started taking on a life of his own. In a sense, Harvey took the book in a direction that I had not contemplated at the outset, but it worked and made a much better book. To me, it is always exciting when the character starts to get away from me and starts doing their own thing rather than what I have pre-ordained because then I can rely on the characters in the story to tell me what the story is, and I become merely the chronicler of the events. It gets to be new to me, in the way that it would be for the reader.

If you are having trouble with a character, take some time thinking about the character and asking yourself simple questions that help define who the character is. What is their favorite food? Do they text message or call people? In a clothing store, pick out items that the character would wear and pick out items that they wouldn’t. Imagine a scene that is not a part of the story with the character in it, and watch how they react to the situation; how are they talking, what are they doing, what gestures do they use, what are they wearing, what are they thinking? Once you are able to do this and know your character better, return to your story and you will find that it will be easier to work with your character.

———————————————————————————————–

Copyright 2008 © LK Gardner-Griffie
Visit me at Griffie World
To buy Misfit McCabe, visit my store at Lulu.com or purchase at Amazon.com
To track Misfit McCabe across the country, visit:
Where in the World is Misfit McCabe?

Own a Kindle? Download Misfit McCabe in an instant.
To read book reviews by LK Gardner-Griffie, visit: The Lulu Book Review

Aug
18
2008
0

Article: In the Words of Mark Twain

Author Mark Twain, while best known for Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, is also known for being a literary critic. During a period of time in his life when he needed to help make ends meet financially, he started writing reviews of other author’s works for newspapers. In 1865, he famously wrote a review titled Fenimore Cooper’s Literary Offenses. Twain maintained that there were 19 rules governing literary art in fiction and that Cooper had violated 18 of them. Let’s take a look at the rules Mark Twain felt were violated in Cooper’s Deerslayer, and see how we can apply them today.

  1. A tale shall accomplish something and arrive somewhere. This goes back to our discussions on conflict. Without conflict you don’t have a story. A story must drive forward to resolve the conflict or come to terms with it in some way.

  2. The episodes in a tale shall be necessary parts of the tale, and shall help to develop it. This means that if a scene in your story is not essential and does not help tell the story in some way, then it needs to be deleted from the story.
  3. The personages in a tale shall be alive, except in the case of corpses, and that always the reader shall be able to tell the corpses from the others. This is one of my favorites: don’t make your characters stick figures - make them as real and true to life as you can.
  4. The personages in a tale, both dead and alive, shall exhibit a sufficient excuse for being there. If there is not a reason for a character to be in the story, then they don’t need to be there. Much like the scene of the story, if the character is not essential and does not help to develop the story in some way, then it should be eliminated.
  5. When the personages of a tale deal in conversation, the talk shall sound like human talk, and be talk such as human beings would be likely to talk in the given circumstances, and have a discoverable meaning, also a discoverable purpose, and a show of relevancy, and remain in the neighborhood of the subject at hand, and be interesting to the reader, and help out the tale, and stop when the people cannot think of anything more to say. The main point here is realistic dialogue. Do not force your characters to say things that are uncharacteristic. Keep the conversation to the point of the story and don’t meander. Remember, if your reader gets bored with the dialogue, they will stop reading.
  6. When the author describes the character of a personage in the tale, the conduct and conversation of that personage shall justify said description. If you describe a character as being well-educated and slightly stiff with formality, then you can not have the character picking booger’s out of his nose during a formal dinner and saying things like “I don’t got none.” However you describe your character, their words and their actions must support your description.
  7. When a personage talks like an illustrated, gilt-edged, tree-calf, hand-tooled, seven-dollar Friendship’s Offering in the beginning of a paragraph, he shall not talk like a negro minstrel in the end of it. Be consistent with how your characters talk. Dialogue is one of the ways to distinguish your character, and it should be evident from the phrasing used as well as the words which character is speaking. Unless the character in question is trying to learn to speak in a different way, such as improving their grammar, or deliberately trying to sound like they belong on the street, then they shouldn’t change they way in which they speak throughout the course of the story.
  8. Crass stupidities shall not be played upon the reader as “the craft of the woodsman, the delicate art of the forest,” by either the author or the people in the tale. Don’t allow your character to have more knowledge or ability than is humanly possible. For example, it is not possible, even for the expert woodsman, to be able to see a fly on the trunk of a tree at 300 yards.
  9. The personages of a tale shall confine themselves to possibilities and let miracles alone; or, if they venture a miracle, the author must so plausibly set it forth as to make it look possible and reasonable. Whatever happens in your story, even if you are writing in the realm of fantasy, must be realistic based on the rules of the environment. For example, you may have invented a world where it is reasonable that pigs can fly, pigs being the intelligent ruling class, but where donkey’s are earthbound creatures. A donkey can not suddenly take flight because it happened upon some pixie dust.
  10. The author shall make the reader feel a deep interest in the personages of his tale and in their fate; and that he shall make the reader love the good people in the tale and hate the bad ones. Make your characters interesting. A reader should feel emotion when bad things happen to the good people as well a being upset when it appears that the bad people will triumph. Make your characters become real for the reader.
  11. The characters in a tale shall be so clearly defined that the reader can tell beforehand what each will do in a given emergency. Your characters should be so real to the reader, that they can imagine how the character would act outside the confines of the story.

In addition to these large rules, there are some little ones. These require that the author shall:

  1. Say what he is proposing to say, not merely come near it. Be clear about the story you are trying to tell.

  2. Use the right word, not its second cousin. There is always the right word for what you are trying to say to give the right flavor to the story. Find that word.
  3. Eschew (to abstain or keep away from; shun; avoid) surplusage (an excess of words). Don’t use ten words, when one will do.
  4. Not omit necessary details. Don’t leave out things that are necessary to the story.
  5. Avoid slovenliness of form. Keep your writing clean and tight.
  6. Use good grammar.
  7. Employ a simple and straightforward style.

———————————————————————————————–

Copyright 2008 © LK Gardner-Griffie
Visit me at Griffie World
To buy Misfit McCabe, visit my store at Lulu.com or purchase at Amazon.com
To track Misfit McCabe across the country, visit:
Where in the World is Misfit McCabe?

Own a Kindle? Download Misfit McCabe in an instant.
To read book reviews by LK Gardner-Griffie, visit: The Lulu Book Review

Aug
18
2008
0

Article: The First Page

Your goal when writing a story is to get the reader to turn the first page. If they don’t want to turn that first page, then they won’t read your story. You have approximately three paragraphs to get the reader involved and to make them want to turn that page. So, how do you get your reader hooked in those first few paragraphs?

There are four fundamentals which can help to increase interest in the opening paragraphs: character, conflict, specificity, and credibility.

Character

If you think about when you are reading a story, one of the first things you want is to be introduced to the protagonist so that you can start to get to know them. We don’t have to know everything about them in the first couple of sentences, but we want to get a flavor for who they are. Will they be someone that we like? Can we identify with what the character is feeling, thinking or doing?

How do we best introduce our character? Readers always like to know what a character looks like so that they can form a mental image. Do we need to fully describe the character’s looks on the first page or is it more important to start establishing their personality? If there is something important about the way a character looks that will enhance the first few paragraphs by including the description, then the answer is yes, you do need to describe that part of the character right away. Otherwise, it is probably better to build the description of your character a little at a time rather than all at once. A story which starts with a detailed description of a character drags, and your mind wants to race ahead to find out why we care about the character.

Misfit McCabe opens with a scene between two characters, Katie and Timmy. From the opening, there is a sense that Katie is the leader between the two who is always coming up with ideas that get the two of them into trouble. Timmy is trying to impress Katie by coming up with a twist to the original idea, to make it seem even more wicked. Plus, he is trying to show her that he can be as “bad” as she is. There is also the impression that as both Katie and Timmy are changing as they age, Katie is unsure about the person her life-long friend is turning into.

Conflict

Without conflict you don’t have a story, so you want to make sure that you at least hint at some conflict during the first page. This does not mean that you need to start the opening sentence with your character running for his life or hanging from a cliff. You will not be able to fully develop the conflict in the first few paragraphs either, so how do you handle conflict in the opening? Some conflicts may be overtly dramatic, such as opening with a character being stabbed through the heart, but others will be more subtle and can take place within the thoughts of a character.

     "You know I'll swear it was all my idea."     "But, Katie, it was all your idea."  Tim reached behind his back and pulled out a flask."Except for this."     "Are you getting sly on me, Timmy Lawrence?"  He never tried anything withoutchecking it out with me first. " What's in it?"  Other than something to get us both intotrouble.     He shrugged one shoulder and leaned back against the side of the shed. " Oh, nothingmuch.  Just a little rum to go with the cokes I brought."  He cracked open a can andhanded it to me.  "Drink some out, so I can spice it up for you."     Swallowing as much as I could in a mouthful, I passed the can back to him. " Whatmade you think of this?"  A new Timmy was emerging, and I didn't know exactly howto handle him.     He grinned as he concentrated on pouring the rum into the coke.  "I just figured thatif we were going to start smoking, we might as well mark the occasion with a drink ofcelebration."  He doctored his drink and set the flask on the ground.  "Anyway, you'realways saying that I never come up with my own ideas.  So I did."     "I'll say.  And what an idea."  I could see the faint flush of pride on Tim's cheeks. 

In the above opening passage of Misfit McCabe, the conflict of Katie rebelling against her everything she has been taught is intimated by her experiment with smoking and drinking. By doing something she knows is wrong, she is trying to break away from the mold of who she is expected to be in order to find out who she really is. There is also the minor conflict hinted at surrounding her changing relationship with Timmy and that she is not sure how she feels about things changing. So, on the one hand, she wants things to change, and on the other she wants them to stay the same.

Specificity

The more specific the detail of the story, the more vividly you paint the picture for your reader. The easier it is for the reader to visualize, or empathize with the character, the more involved they become with the story. Use specifics rather than generalities in the characters speech, description of the setting, and the character’s thoughts. Let’s take a look at the difference using a specific term versus a more generic term makes in the way something reads.

Version 1 - “But, Katie, it was all your idea.” Tim reached behind his back and pulled out a bottle. “Except for this.”

Version 2 - “But, Katie, it was all your idea.” Tim reached behind his back and pulled out a flask. “Except for this.”

The word bottle and the word flask both mean a container which holds liquids, but the word bottle is much more generic than the word flask. A bottle could contain milk, water, or even Kool-aid. A flask contains alcohol. By using the word flask, we leave the reader no question as to what Timmy has brought with him. When polishing your opening page, examine each word to ensure that you have used the best, most specific word you can to draw the reader into your story.

Credibility

How do you make sure that your first page is credible? That may be the most difficult question to answer because what it means is that you have started your story well enough to allow the reader to trust you as an author. So how do you get the reader to trust that you can tell the story well?

  • Make sure what you have written is tight. Don’t use ten words, when just a few will do. As authors, we tend to use more words when we are struggling to bring a scene to life than when we know where we are going with the story. When you are reviewing what you have written, go over each sentence and see whether or not you could “tighten” it up by reducing some of the words, or changing several general words to the use of one specific word.
  • Use the word that comes closest to the image of what you are trying to convey. This goes back to specificity. Remember the example of the use of the word flask versus the word bottle and which one best conveyed the image to the reader.
  • Your reader should not have to try and decipher what you mean. Work on making your meaning clear. Just because the meaning is clear to you doesn’t mean that it is clear to your potential reader. The best way to find out whether you have been successful is to have different people read the passage and if they have questions about what is going on, then you need to make some changes to clarify the meaning. Sometimes we really like the words that we have written and think that it says exactly what we want it to. The question that you then have to ask yourself is whether you are writing for your eyes only, or do you want more people to enjoy your story. If your answer is that you want more people to enjoy your story, then swallow your pride and rewrite the confusing passage so that it is understandable to the reader.
  • Remember, your words should reveal your story and bring it to life. If you are trying to show the reader how clever you are as a writer, chances are the reader will sense that you are trying to show off and will then have a negative attitude about reading your work.

———————————————————————————————–

Copyright 2008 © LK Gardner-Griffie
Visit me at Griffie World
To buy Misfit McCabe, visit my store at Lulu.com or purchase at Amazon.com
To track Misfit McCabe across the country, visit:
Where in the World is Misfit McCabe?

Own a Kindle? Download Misfit McCabe in an instant.
To read book reviews by LK Gardner-Griffie, visit: The Lulu Book Review

Aug
18
2008
0

Article: Storytelling Methods

So far, I have been able to share with you what I would call an overview of writing. How to set up your environment, some tips on how to get the ideas flowing, and things of that nature. Now we need to start discussing some of the nuts and bolts of writing. This is where we get to break down what we’re writing and identify what it is that we’re doing and then we’ll be able to make some decisions as to whether it is effective or not. I used to argue with a teacher of mine about knowing what things are called, because if I was writing correctly, why did I need to know what it was I was doing? Actually, what I was really asking was why we had to study things that were so BORING. I’ll try to keep the boring parts to a minimum. The reason it is important for you to know what you are doing or what is correct, is when you want to change it or deliberately break the rules for effect or simply try different mechanisms to see which works the best. Let’s get started with an examination of narrative mode.

So, what do I mean by narrative mode? Narrative means a story or account of events, experiences, or the like, whether true or fictitious and mode is a manner of acting or doing; method; way. So a narrative mode is simply the method or way in which we tell a story. There are five methods to telling a fictitious story: dialogue (the conversation between characters in a novel, drama, etc.), description (a statement, picture in words, or account that describes), action (description in motion; an event or series of events), thoughts (the act or process of thinking; cogitation), and exposition (writing or speech primarily intended to convey information or to explain).

Usually, during the course of a novel, most, if not all five, of the methods listed above will be used. Your characters will have dialogue, you’ll describe some of the scenery, there will be passages full of actions, you’ll take the reader into the thoughts of the character(s), and sometimes you will simply explain what is happening. This will happen most of the time in a natural way. So why is it important for us to be able to identify which method is being used?

I’ve mentioned before that your opening is the most important and when you start writing, you will be using predominantly one of the above five modes. But, which one really works the best to get the attention of the reader? That will vary from story to story. You might need to try writing an opening using each of the five modes to see which one works best for your story.

How would that work? Let’s take Misfit McCabe as an example. In the actual book, I used dialogue as the predominant narrative mode to get the story started.

     "You know I'll swear it was all my idea."

     "But, Katie, it was all your idea." Tim reached behind his back and pulled out a flask.

"Except for this."

     "Are you getting sly on me, Timmy Lawrence?" He never tried anything withoutchecking it out with me first. "What's in it?" Other than something to get us bothinto trouble.     He shrugged one shoulder and leaned back against the side of the shed. "Oh, nothingmuch.  Just a little rum to go with the cokes I brought." He cracked open a can andhanded it to me.  "Drink some out, so I can spice it up for you."

     Swallowing as much as I could in a mouthful, I passed the can back to him. "What made

you think of this?" A new Timmy was emerging, and I didn't know exactly how to handle him.

     He grinned as he concentrated on pouring the rum into the coke. "I

just figured that if we were going to start smoking, we might as well

mark the occasion with a drink of celebration." He doctored his drink

and set the flask on the ground. "Anyway, you're always saying that I

never come up with my own ideas. So I did."     "I'll say. And what an idea."  I could see the faint flush of pride

on Tim's cheeks.

While the above passage has dialogue, Katie’s thoughts, and things that describe what Katie and Tim are both doing (action), the bulk of the opening is dialogue. This helps to draw the reader in and jump start the action of the story.

What if we were to start Misfit McCabe with the description mode rather than dialogue? The first beginning that I had for the book did open with a descriptive passage.

     The bus rattled and bumped its way down the road, the seats creaked, and the sidesseemed to groan more with every mile. The windows didn't stay shut, so my mouth feltas dry as cotton from the dust that poured in, and the heat of the day made the bus feellike the inside of an oven.  I felt cranky from lack of sleep, and my eyes felt gritty andburned from the dust.     At least I had the seat to myself, and could sit through the long ride without someone

interrupting my thoughts. What a sight I must be for the other passengers, my arms folded

across my chest, a scowl for an expression, and my long, blonde hair hanging in my face. I

crouched down low in the seat and thrust my knees against the back of the seat in front ofme.  I didn't want to make this trip, and didn't care what anyone else thought about meeither.  How could Daddy send me away from him, especially when he was sick? What ifhe didn't get better?  I had to push that thought out of my mind. I didn't even want tothink about that possibility.  He had to get better, he just had to. The motion of the bus,along with my sleepless night, soon lulled me to sleep.

What this accomplishes is to establish Katie on a bus leaving home as well as some of her features and attitudes. How does this compare to the actual beginning of the book? Let’s look at how a descriptive beginning would look starting it in the shed.

     Although the afternoon sun shone brightly, the inside of the shed remained dark.  Theonly light filtered through the cracks in the walls. We kept the light off in order to keepfrom attracting any attention, not that we would. Even with the lights on and the dooropen, the shed was hidden from the house and people were used to seeing me on theproperty because I helped Mr. Pickford with the care of his animals. In the dim interiorof the shed, I could see Timmy's skinny silhouette sitting on a bale of hay waiting forme to join him. It was definitely cooler inside than out in the dry heat of the afternoon.As I sat down, Tim reached behind his back and pulled out a flask, a sly smile crossinghis face. He cracked open a can of soda and I could hear the fizzing bubbles as he handedit to me.  Brushing my blonde hair away from my face, I tipped my head back andswallowed as much as I could in one mouthful and handed back the can for him to spiceit up for me.  Tim doctored his own drink and set the flask down on the ground.     Timmy grinned at me. "I figured if we were going to start smoking, we might as wellmark the occasion with a drink of celebration."  Excellent.  At least we would have trieda few things by the time we started high school next week.

This essentially covers the same part of the story line of the opening paragraphs of Misfit McCabe but does it through description of the scene rather than dialogue. If we wanted to start the book with the narrative mode being predominantly action, then we need to start a little farther into the story in order to help make the story start more dramatically.

     I heard a crackling sound behind me.  As Tim turned to look at me his eyes got big andall of a sudden I could smell smoke overpowering the smell of the cigarettes.  The dry hayhad caught fire.  It must have started from the match I thought had gone out, and theflames were starting to rage.  Grabbing Timmy's hand, I followed my instincts and ran.     Running as fast as I could, I wanted to get as far away as possible. I noticed thatsomehow I lost Tim.  Turning around, I saw him looking back at the shed.  "Timmy!Come on! We have got to get out of here."  Tim refused to run away because if wedidn't try to put it out, the fire could spread rapidly.     Sending Timmy for help, I turned around and faced the burning shed once more trying todetermine if there was anything I could do while waiting for help to come.  At least Icouldn't see the flames outside yet.  Running over to a young tree, I broke off a long, leafybranch.  I placed my hands on the outside of the shed door to feel for heat. It was still cool.Stepping to one side of the door, I balanced on one foot and kicked the door in.  I jumpedback.  No flames came shooting out.  That was a good sign. I looked inside. Almost theentire floor was engulfed in flames.  I started beating those closest to me.     Sweating from the intense heat, I kept beating the flames in a losing battle.  My eyes andthroat stung from the smoke and I felt like help would never come.  After I singed the firstbranch completely, I ran back and got another branch and continued beating the flamesthe best I could.

Notice that with the action beginning, you spend less time describing the scenery or characters and more focus is spent describing the events that are occurring. How would you start Misfit McCabe using the thought mode? In this case, because the story is written in first person, it is not possible to shift from one person’s thoughts to another, so it will all be from Katie’s point of view. Plus, when writing, you want to make sure that you have clear, concise changes in view point. Unless your aim is to cause your reader some confusion, you want to make sure it is clear which characters’ thoughts you are following.

    As I walked into the shed to join Timmy, it came over me all of a sudden how much hemeant to me.  He was always there for me.  Skinny, tousled hair, and clothes that hadalways seen better days.  I'd known him my whole life, or as long as I could remember,and he was as close to a brother as I would ever have. We had both grown up in this smalltown and were both restless and aching to try something new, something that we had notexperienced before.  Our bond was formed early because neither one of us had a mother,mine because she had been killed in a car accident and his just up and left.   Timmy wanted things to change between us, for us to be boyfriend and girlfriend, and Iwasn't sure that I wanted things to change. I loved him more than myself, but he was toofamiliar, too close to me. As I sat down next to him, he surprised me by pulling a flask frombehind his back. A new Timmy was definitely emerging. Tim, I had to remember to callhim Tim. It was hard because I'd always called him Timmy. He wanted to start high schoolas Tim Lawrence, and while I understood, my tongue slipped on the name all the time. Iused to be able to read his thoughts like an open book, but that was changing too.

Now let’s take a look at what the beginning would look like using the narrative mode of exposition. You may recognize the style as similar to the fairy tales that were read to you as you were young.


     Once upon a time, in a small, isolated town, lived a fourteen year old girl named, KatieMcCabe.  Katie lived with her father, who was the county sheriff. She lost her motherwhen she was a small child when her mother was hit by a car.  Katie's best friend in thewhole town was a boy her own age, named Tim Lawrence. Katie and Timmy dideverything together.  It seemed to her Daddy that the thing that they did the mosttogether was get into trouble.  Katie was getting restless with life in a small town andwas wanting to go out and experience more of life.  Unbeknownst to her, her Daddywas beginning to think that he should send her to live with his older brother.  He was notwell and Katie was getting to be too much of a handful.

Exposition is where you, as the author, take the time to set up the story by explaining things to the reader up front.

Now that we have explored all five of the narrative mode types, you should be able to try writing a story, or the opening to a story using one of the five methods. Sometimes, the best way to find out which type of narrative mode should be used to help you create a strong beginning is to try writing the beginning in each of the five styles and see which one works the best for you and your story.

———————————————————————————————–

Copyright 2008 © LK Gardner-Griffie
Visit me at Griffie World
To buy Misfit McCabe, visit my store at Lulu.com or purchase at Amazon.com
To track Misfit McCabe across the country, visit:
Where in the World is Misfit McCabe?

Own a Kindle? Download Misfit McCabe in an instant.
To read book reviews by LK Gardner-Griffie, visit: The Lulu Book Review

Aug
18
2008
0

Article: Tips for Creating Your Masterpiece

While you are working on your story, there are a few things to keep in mind to help you write your best.

  1. You don’t have to write the WHOLE thing all in one sitting. Even if working on a short story, it is a good idea to take some rest breaks, even when your ideas are flowing well. A regular break from your story will allow your brain to take a breather and keep you energized and refreshed, which ultimately allows you to write even better.

  2. Don’t try to keep plowing through when you are getting sleepy. When you are tired, call it quits for the day and pick things up again the next day. The worst mistakes start creeping in when you are tired, and your ideas start to become muddled.
  3. While you are working through the creative process, just write. Don’t stop and edit as you go, just keep writing. You will have plenty of opportunity to go back and edit the work once you have reached the end. By stopping and changing gears from creative mode to critical thinking mode, you can end up stifling the very creativity that you need to finish your story.
  4. You know yourself better than anyone else, so if you need something, like food or music, or even a pair of drumsticks by your side as your work, then make sure that you have that with you. The more you can do to help yourself get the creative juices flowing the better. I like to have music playing, but the only songs that I want to play are ones that I know all the words to so I can sing along without thinking about the song itself. What this does is occupy the part of my mind that gets easily distracted, and allows me to focus on what is important - getting the words down on the page.

Hopefully these few tips will assist you while creating your masterpiece. They are also good for studying as well.

———————————————————————————————–

Copyright 2008 © LK Gardner-Griffie
Visit me at Griffie World
To buy Misfit McCabe, visit my store at Lulu.com or purchase at Amazon.com
To track Misfit McCabe across the country, visit:
Where in the World is Misfit McCabe?

Own a Kindle? Download Misfit McCabe in an instant.
To read book reviews by LK Gardner-Griffie, visit: The Lulu Book Review

Aug
17
2008
0

Article: Battling the Blank Page

You’ve made sure that your writing environment is comfortable, you have done some brainstorming and come up with an idea that you want to make into a story, you have written the synopsis, made character sketches and drafted your outline. You are ready to actually get down to the business of writing the story.

For some writers this is the most difficult part; facing the blank page. There it is staring at you, no words written or a blinking cursor on a blank page of a computer screen. The beginning of any story is the most important isn’t it? So how do you start? What should be the first word?

I have written many first sentences to start a story, re-read the sentence and scratched it out, or deleted it. Again, and again I would write a sentence only to deem it not good enough. I would end up with an entire page of scratched out entries and still not have a beginning to my story. How do we avoid this?

  1. Do some writing prompts. When we exercise, it is always best to do some warm up activities before starting the actual exercise itself. Stretches are recommended to limber up the muscles and get the blood flowing to all of the right parts of your body. Writing prompts are just like those exercises for the writing side of your brain. By starting with writing something that has absolutely nothing to do with your story gets your creative juices flowing and gets you ready to focus on your main task, which is writing your story.
    What is a writing prompt? A writing prompt is an idea jogger or brain starter. Simply put, it is a question or an idea that you write a response to.

    Where can you find writing prompts? If you have access to a computer, you can use Google, or Yahoo, or any other search engine and do a search for writing prompts. Writers Digest has some good ones. There are also books that you can buy which are designed to help you stimulate ideas. Some good examples of those types of books are The Writer’s Book of Matches and Writer’s Little Instruction Book.

    A few sample writing prompts would be:

    Create a character that has an unusual phobia. Write a scene that causes that character to face his fear.
    You bump into a genie and she offers to grant you three wishes. What are your wishes and why?
    Write a 26-word story where every word begins with a different letter of the alphabet.

  2. Relax. If you get too worked up over writing a sensational beginning, your work will suffer for it. By putting too much stress on yourself to write a fantastic beginning, what happens is that your creativity is stifled and is not being allowed to flow. By relaxing and realizing that you don’t have to write the perfect beginning the first time out, your ideas will flow much more readily and your story will improve.

  3. Don’t sweat it if you get stuck. Get up, walk around. Sometimes a change in environment for even a few minutes is all you need to do to get the creativity flowing again. Walking tends to clear your mind.

  4. Don’t edit what you are writing while you are writing it. A first draft is always very rough, and trust me, you’ll have plenty of other opportunities to go back and edit your work. Your purpose at this point in the writing game is to simply get the ideas down on paper. You’re not aiming for perfection or anything even close to it. It’s time for the critical part of your brain to pipe down, go to sleep, or if necessary, send it on vacation. When you can block out the critical part of your brain, your ideas will flow onto the page and give you plenty of good stuff to edit later.

  5. Start off generally. You don’t want to start you story in the middle of your plot, so take some time to do some introductions first. Set the scene.
    If you are still having trouble getting started, then opt for a classic style beginning. Start with a description of your characters or the surrounding scenery.
    Once you get started, you’ll notice that the writing becomes easier.

———————————————————————————————–

Copyright 2008 © LK Gardner-Griffie
Visit me at Griffie World
To buy Misfit McCabe, visit my store at Lulu.com or purchase at Amazon.com
To track Misfit McCabe across the country, visit:
Where in the World is Misfit McCabe?

Own a Kindle? Download Misfit McCabe in an instant.
To read book reviews by LK Gardner-Griffie, visit: The Lulu Book Review

Aug
17
2008
0

Article: Preparing to Write

Before you start writing your story there are things that you need to do to prepare to write it. These are things that will help keep your writing focused and on track and that will help you have a better understanding of the story that you will ultimately write.

1. Write a synopsis (a brief summary of the plot of a novel). Before starting the story itself, write down a couple paragraphs summarizing the story. This should be a general description of the main story line. What is the story that you want to tell? If you’re not sure how to summarize the story that you want to write, practice by summarizing some of your favorite books. A sample synopsis of Misfit McCabe might be:

As summer comes to an end, Katie McCabe learns that her father is ill and will not be able to care for her for awhile. Motherless, she is sent to live with an uncle and cousins that she has never met. Starting a new school in a new town is hard enough, but Katie makes an enemy of the town bully her first day in town. She is angry with her father for sending her away and sets out to make life as difficult as possible for her uncle.

When her father passes away, her emotions spiral out of control and on top of that, the battles with the town bully escalate until Katie finds herself breaking the law to extract revenge. Caught red-handed, Katie is brought home by a deputy sherrif, and is horrified to learn that her uncle feels that he has failed her. Through one final act of revenge by the town bully, Katie finds herself lost and alone, struggling to get back to the only family she has left.

2. Write some character sketches. List each of your main characters and write a few sentences about each one. You can include as much detail as you’d like, even things that you don’t plan to use in your final story. This helps solidify your knowledge of your characters. Writing down information about them that doesn’t actually go into the story itself is an example of background information. The more background information you have about your characters, the more three dimensional they become. The reactions to the events of the story are always colored by the background information of the character. For example: In Misfit McCabe, Katie reacts very strongly to the accusation that she cheated on a test and is extremely dismayed that no one appears to believe that she has not cheated. Part of Katie’s back story is that she has been accused before, and no one believed her then except her Daddy, who made sure the record was set straight. So, part of her reactions are due to a part of her story that has never been told.

3. What does the setting of your book look like? Can you draw a picture of it? Or can you find a picture that looks like the place you are writing about? Having a firm grasp of the place you are setting your story in makes a great deal of difference in the small details of the story.

4. Now that you have the synopsis, your character sketches and a firm idea of the setting of your story, it’s time to start writing the outline. Start with your synopsis and start filling in the details, as much detail as you can. It doesn’t matter what the outline format is, just get down as many details as you possibly can to provide the backbone for your story.

5. Now that you’ve done all of that, it’s time to let the ideas simmer for awhile. Take a few days off, and let your story really solidify in your mind.

———————————————————————————————–

Copyright 2008 © LK Gardner-Griffie
Visit me at Griffie World
To buy Misfit McCabe, visit my store at Lulu.com or purchase at Amazon.com
To track Misfit McCabe across the country, visit:
Where in the World is Misfit McCabe?

Own a Kindle? Download Misfit McCabe in an instant.
To read book reviews by LK Gardner-Griffie, visit: The Lulu Book Review

Aug
17
2008
0

Article: The Writing Environment

Since I am getting ready to start working on some new material, I thought it would be a good time to share with you some of the things that are important to determine before you begin writing. In order to help you do your best writing, you have to know what it is that helps you focus on the writing. The below are some things to keep in mind.

  1. Where do you do your best writing? Is it in your bedroom, the living room, or somewhere outside? Where do ideas seem to flow for you? Wherever that place is for you, that’s where you should set up your writing space. While I was writing Misfit McCabe, my best place was the kitchen table. I thought it was my room, but for some reason, in my bedroom, I kept getting off track and couldn’t focus on writing. Now I do my best writing in a spare bedroom, also known as our computer room. Wherever your best place to write is, make sure it is comfortable and you have everything you need to hand.

    A comfortable seat - it could be a chair, a bean bag, a nice tree to lean against.
    If you write using pencils, make sure that you have several sharp pencils and erasers available. Or if you use pens, keep more than one on hand so you won’t run out of ink.
    Do you have enough paper?
    I work on the computer, so I don’t have to worry about pencils, pens, or paper during the creative process, however, I do need to make sure that where I am working is properly setup and comfortable.

  2. What time of day do you get your best ideas? Is it morning, during the middle of the day, or at night? Of course, during the middle of the day will probably be hard for you because of school, and for me because of work. I have always done my best work at night going into the wee hours of the morning. For some reason, the creative juices seem to flow much better for me then and I can concentrate more clearly while my characters become alive for me. It’s almost like I can feel the creative vibrations in the air.
  3. Noise is definitely a factor. Some people can’t work with noise and some people can’t work without it. I find the noise of television or conversation a distraction and for the most part like to work with only the sounds of nature creating the background noise. Sometimes, I do like to listen to classical music while I work as well. If you do like noise while you work, then play music or have the television on low sound. The last thing you want to do is to distract yourself from what you are working on.
  4. Light makes a difference in your concentration factor as well. Do you like the light soft, or bright, or even no light at all? I do the majority of my writing now while looking at a computer screen, so my optimum light is a soft, indirect light. Overhead fluorescent lights tend to bother me, so if I am in a place that has those, I turn them off so I am do not get a headache from the glare that they cause.
  5. Pay attention to the temperature of your writing area. If it is too cold, or you get too hot, you will start thinking about your comfort, which interrupts your writing process.
  6. Do you write better with things to eat close to hand or not? I myself like to write with a big mug of tea to the right of my keyboard, within easy reach, so I don’t have to think about where the mug is, but can just grab it while I am thinking.
  7. Make sure that your writing area is well organized. Some people believe that the area should be uncluttered to lead to an uncluttered mind, but others like to have toys around to help them in the creative process. I like to have a few familiar things around me as a stark writing area for me creates a blank mind rather than an uncluttered one.

By the way, all of the above are also good tips for creating a good environment for doing homework as well.
———————————————————————————————–

Copyright 2008 © LK Gardner-Griffie
Visit me at Griffie World
To buy Misfit McCabe, visit my store at Lulu.com or purchase at Amazon.com
To track Misfit McCabe across the country, visit:
Where in the World is Misfit McCabe?

Own a Kindle? Download Misfit McCabe in an instant.
To read book reviews by LK Gardner-Griffie, visit: The Lulu Book Review

Powered by WordPress | Aeros Theme | TheBuckmaker.com WordPress Themes