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Our 2017 Writing Resolutions

As we approach the end of the year, we reflect back on 2016 and look toward 2017. We here at The Mixed-Up Files have been thinking about our goals for the next year. So here are the writing resolutions of middle-grade authors. Reading resolutions will be posted on Friday.

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Some of us have been thinking of stretching our writing into other genres.

  • Julie Artz, for example, has resolved “to work on short story craft. I’m proud of my progress–I sold my first two stories this year–but I also think I have more room for improvement, so I’m keeping this as my goal for 2017 too.”
  • Michele Weber Hurwitz is “working on a middle grade novel in a different genre than I usually write, which is contemporary realistic fiction. This new WIP is magical realism with a bit of mystery and I’m having a lot of fun with it. I hope to finish and — cross fingers — sell that in 2017.”
  • Rosanne Parry has “a poetry event coming up in April in which I will read one or two of my poems alongside Sherman Alexie and Elizabeth Woody (Oregon’s poet laureate) So in preparation for that I want to write one new poem a week and practice reading poetry out loud.”

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Many people make New Year’s resolutions that have to do with time management, and authors are no different.

  • Michelle Houts resolves “to develop a more scheduled writing life (as opposed to the haphazard writing la-la land in which I currently dwell- ooh! Look! That project is shiny!)”
  • Jen Swanson intends to “work on my fiction manuscripts more and get them in shape. Try not to take on too many projects and/or get too over-committed.”
  • Jacqueline Houtman “will do more to prioritize my kidlit writing, even when I have freelance work on my plate. I will go back to regular writing sessions at my local coffee shop.”
  • Each week in the coming year, T.P. Jagger “will make progress on my own WIP, even when other writing and/or work-related deadlines are pressing.”

 Some of us want to go beyond time management and add productivity tools to our toolkits.  

  • Amie Borst intends “to effectively use my writing time with a voice to text program (because let’s face it, I have problems sitting still for extended periods of time and I need to enlist guilt-free techniques to meet my goals).”
  • Louise Galveston resolves “to write outside my usual comfort zone and to master Scrivener.”

The New Year is a time for new beginnings, so many of us are eyeing new projects.

  • Dorian Cirrone plans “to finally work on the novel I have been thinking about for literally twenty-five years.”
  • Kimberly Griffiths Little hopes to “hear back from my editor on my MG proposal I wrote more than a year ago and begin writing it! It might be my most challenging idea I’ve ever had.” 

Sometimes finishing a draft is harder than starting it.  

  • Jonathan Rosen vows to “write more often and finish another book before the summer.”
  • Sue Cowing wants “to finish drafting my book of poems about extinct animals and trust my wildest imagination in the final flourishes.”
  • Laurie J. Edwards resolves “to complete the 6 books I have under contract and to write the middle grade historical and science mystery series I started.”
  • “With joy and gratitude,” Hillary Homzie plans “to complete my middle grade science fantasy and the last two books in my forthcoming chapter book series, Ellie May (2018).”

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 As they say at a youth newspaper in my town, “Never turn in your first draft.” Every draft needs to be rewritten and revised.

  • Mindy Alyse Weiss  wants to “finish rewriting my current middle grade novel then flesh out and begin writing the shiny new MG idea that hit me during a workshop this past weekend.”
  • Valerie Stein resolves “to finish editing the book my publishing company releases this summer (middle school and up, about endangered species), and to edit and add new materials to our middle grade history project. That is others’ writing, though. For me, the goal is to finish read-through of my current work in progress (not middle grade), so changes can go on to beta readers. My stretch goal is to get that project in other hands and then apply for a writing grant for work on my first full middle grade manuscript in 2017.”
  • Andrea Pyros resolves to “Finish the revise of my MG novel. I’m getting there, slowly and steadily, but I’d like to have a completed second draft done SOON so I can show it to some people for critical (not too critical, I hope!) feedback.”

Some of our resolutions are not about specific projects, but about our attitudes.

  • Michael Hays will “keep pushing to produce work that supports and promotes the ideals of The Brown Bookshelf‘s “A Declaration in Support of Children” and finish two skill-stretching books in 2017.”
  • Tricia Springstubb wants to “remember that with every book–every book–I come to a place where I’m sure I’ll fail. Try not to despair but instead see this as a necessary (if vile) part of my process.”
  • Kate Manning’s resolution is “Joy! To have fun with my writing, try new things, and dig deep.”

The bloggers at The Mixed-Up Files wish you a happy holiday season and a productive new year. What are your writing resolutions for 2017? Share them in the comments.

Holiday Wishes and a Narnian Christmas!

Warmest Holiday Wishes from all of us here at the Mixed-Up Files! It’s time to celebrate the joys of the season with family and friends, but what do you do when the partying ends? Here are some fun, book-themed things to make while you’re on holiday break.

And since no book says “Christmas!” to me quite like The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, here are activities based on it and other books in The Chronicles of Narnia.

Snowflakes Okay, I know this one isn’t Narnia-themed, but there are lots of sites for themed templates–we always do the new Star Wars flakes found here every year, and this site has an entire menagerie of simple animal flakes if you’d like to stay in keeping with the book.

 

Turkish Delight When I directed The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe a few years ago, one of the actor’s moms made Turkish Delight for the cast party. I can see why Edmund lost his head over the stuff–yum! Here’s an easy, microwavable recipe .

Mrs. Beaver’s Sticky Marmalade Roll It’s a testimony to Mrs. Beaver’s culinary talent that she was able to whip this comfort food up with such speed. Here’s a simple recipe from Astrid Tuttle Winegar that will help you give it a go, deary.

Many Coloured Sugar

Sweeter still is this “Many Coloured Sugar” craft based on the treat in Prince Caspian’s feast.

And if your taste turns more toward adventure, try your luck at making your own Dawn Treader! But before you cross into the wonderful world of Narnia, you’ll need to convert one of your leftover gift boxes into a Magical Wardrobe.

Once there, you’ll meet Aslan, the Great Lion. Here’s a video of how you can build him using origami. Or you could become Aslan yourself with this face paint tutorial. It wouldn’t be Narnia without Cair Paravel; here are some ideas for building your castle!

Remember: Once a king or queen of Narnia, always a king or queen of Narnia!

What’s your favorite holiday read ?

 

Louise’s daughters as a wolf and Mrs. Beaver in The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe. Louise Galveston is the author of By the Grace of Todd and In Todd We Trust (Penguin/Razorbill.)

Let There Be…

“We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light.”   Plato

This shortest day of a too-dark year seems  a good time to share a story I sometimes tell on school visits. I can’t remember where I first heard or read it, and I change it a bit every time.

Once there was a king who was growing old. Soon it would be time to leave his kingdom to one of his three daughters, so he called them all to him. Which of them could fill the throne room, wall to wall and ceiling to floor with something precious? She would inherit the crown.

The first daughter ran to the royal coffers and had the servants drag in bag upon bag of gold coins and spill them out. Yet they did not fill the room.

The second daughter ran to the royal wardrobe and had the maids carry in piles of gowns and jewels and dancing shoes. They did not fill the room either.

The third daughter stood before her father and quietly smiled. She reached into her pocket, making her big sisters laugh and sneer. As if a person could fill this grand room with something small enough to fit into her hand!

But they stopped laughing when their sister drew out …a candle. For when she lit it, its yellow glow grew and grew till it reached every corner of the room, spreading its golden warmth everywhere.

Books, I tell the kids, are a lot like that candle. Stories and poems glow and spark and warm the world with their shining light. They show us the way. They make us less afraid. They fit in our pockets, yet their light fills hearts. A book, some  poet once said, “should be a ball of light in one’s hands.”

So on this longest night of the year, let’s light candles, let’s build fires, let’s write and read and share stories. Let’s remember again some of the wisest words ever written. “Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that,” wrote Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. “Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.”