Wow, didn't March totally fly by?  Before we knew it April slipped in while we were all running around with Easter eggs.  During March the MRWG Bloggers were busy writing up a storm about a myriad of engaging topics.
Here's a quick look back over our shoulder at the fabulous offerings during March.
Margaret Midwood at http://www.margaretmidwood.com/my-blog.html posted two articles, "Increasing Word Counts and Satisfaction at the Keyboard" and "Writing and Pushing Through The Self Doubt.

Ebony McKenna at - http://ejmckennablog.blogspot.com.au has blogged about "The Lives of Cover Models", "Ondine's Army", "Keeping Time" and "Why Do E-books Cost So Much?".

Serena Tatti at the Story Editor Blog hosted Kamy Chetty who contributed "Using Deep POV to step out of the Slush Pile" http://serenatattistoryeditor.blogspot.com.au/2013/03/welcome-to-my-guest-author-kamy-chetty.html

Louise Reynolds has been continuing her Cooking the Books Series featuring Guest authors. In March she hosted:
Kamy Chetty - http://louwrites.wordpress.com/2013/03/08/cooking-the-books-kamy-chetty/
Madeline Ash - http://louwrites.wordpress.com/2013/03/13/cooking-the-books-madeline-ash/
Emmie Dark - http://louwrites.wordpress.com/2013/03/19/cooking-the-books-emmie-dark/
S E Gilchrist - http://louwrites.wordpress.com/2013/03/27/cooking-the-books-s-e-gilchrist/

Emmie dark was in competition mode in March and also celebrated the release of her Destiny Romance, "Spellbound", to read more follow this link : http://emmiedark.blogspot.com.au/2013/03/its-spellbound-release-day.html

Thanks for dropping by. I hope you find something special that you might have missed. 



 
 
Flushed with excitement Ebony McKenna descended the stage stairs at the Melbourne Emerging Writers Festival in 2010. Dark curls bounced around her shoulders, her cheerful countenance and rosy cheeks a testament to her successful interview. In looks she reminds me of Snow White and also in temperament. Her honest enthusiasm for sharing her love of her first book Ondine is infectious. In this heady moment I asked my fellow Melbourne Romance Writers Guild Member if she would grant me an interview for an assignment in my professional writing course. How could she refuse?

Sitting in her warm and welcoming home Ebony and I drink coffee and talk about our favourite topic, writing. In particular I’m interested in the path which took her from unpublished author to emerging writer. With writing roots in journalism and the later shift to writing novels she focused on writing for a market. The difference with ‘Ondine’, her young adult novel published by Egmont, was that she wrote to please herself.

Of course she had knowledge of the market however this wasn’t her priority while writing ‘Ondine’. She said ‘I had no idea where it would fit.’ ‘I didn’t even think about the market’ during the revision process her publisher suggested changes to accommodate the target market of young teenage girls. It is interesting to note that reader reviews show the mothers of these girls also enjoyed the book so much they recommended it to their friends, showing that McKenna has tapped into the accessibility of Young Adult fiction to appeal to a broad market.

Ebony explained that she also wrote about what she knows. Her experience of being raised in small rural town where everyone knows you informed her knowledge of what life would be like for Ondine. Ebony helped out in her parent’s restaurant, this life experience enabled her to bring authenticity to Ondine’s character who is growing up in her parents hotel. She recalls what it was like to be a teenager, saying, ‘I enjoy writing about this age because the feelings are still there, the peaks and troughs. As a teenager these are the first hurdles you come against and so they feel like the worst thing possible.’ In creating the characters for Ondine she said she got to know them so well that she fell in love with them and in return they loved her back. ‘Love your characters and they will love you,’ she said and then laughed because it had just that minute occurred to her to coin the phrase. We both picked up our pens to write it down.

 I asked how becoming published had impacted on her writing. She said, ‘It doesn’t feel like a hobby anymore and I don’t feel I have to justify my writing time. When I got an agent I didn’t feel like I was pretending anymore’ and ‘I have always had a good writing routine.’ ‘It just solidified it for me that I have to get that done first before I do anything else.’

McKenna’s passion for her book is compelling. No wonder she had success with getting it published.

It has been a couple of years since I interviewed Ebony. Since then book two of the series ‘The Autumn Palace’ has been published and book three is completed and ready for publication.

 
 
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By Ebony McKenna

I don’t create characters; all I do is get to know them better.

Which sounds like I’m making excuses. Seriously, I’m not. But this is how it happens for me. A character pops into my head, without much substance.

“Oh hello,” I say, and they might nod or point to something nearby or wave or change their hair colour right before my eyes.

But aside from that, they’re not very interesting.

Yet.

I need to get to know them. Understand what they want, what they need, what’s in their way and what aspect of their character they’re in denial about.

Everyone’s in denial about something. That’s human nature.

As Cara Gabriel posted earlier - there are many things you need to ask your character to get to know them.

Sure, I can plot out some basic elements of the overall story, but without knowing the characters, I have no story.

Recently, I had a blazing hot idea about rebooting an historical legend. Let’s call him Sir Lancelot. (It’s not Sir Lancelot. I’m throwing you off the scent. Or *am* I?) But from then on I only had the general idea. I didn’t have true character.

I used Cara’s questions and worked out my character’s goals, motivations and conflicts. I wanted to know what they wanted most from life. What they feared. Why they did what they did. What (or who?) was in their way?

But most of all, what was the glaringly obvious character flaw everyone else could see but they couldn’t? Their blind spot. Their weakness. Their kryptonite.

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That’s when the magic happens. That’s when the characters take on a life of their own. That’s when I find myself in the scene, madly writing down everything the character does and says, trying desperately to keep up.

The characters lead me on a merry chase, get me into arguments, get lost, land in trouble and fall in love. They are in control, not me.

Yet I’m the writer. I should be in control, yes?

No. When characters become real, they are the ones in charge.

I’m merely along for the ride.

Next time you have a blazing hot idea that burns to be written, use Cara’s 10 questions to get to know your characters. Find out what they most desire in life. Why is it out of reach? Will they hurt people along the way (even when they don’t mean to. Especially if they don’t mean to).

When you know your characters, the story will flow.





Ebony McKenna is a fantastically imaginative author whose scope and story-telling encompasses the bizarre, the mysterious and the romantic. Her Ondine books are a sparkling combination of romance and magic – perfect for teen girls. Written with genuine humour and unique eccentricity, the series is an obvious choice for fans of The Princess Bride and Ella Enchanted.

twitter - twitter.com/#!/EbonyMcKenna
email - author@ebonymckenna.com
web - www.ebonymckenna.com