Monday, January 27, 2014

Guest Blogger: Patricia Bradley


(Patricia Bradley is a workshop speaker at the upcoming MSCWC)

Giving Your Characters an Identity

The title to this post is a little misleading. As an author, I don’t actually give my characters their identity or even their name. They tell me who they think they are. And they don’t do it all at one time. They never agree with who I think they are, but they always win.

Like my recent bout with my heroine of the last book in the Logan Point series. She was a little easier than most characters as she already had a name. Olivia Reynolds, but only her enemies and her superiors called her Olivia. To everyone else, she was Livy. What wasn’t so easy to figure out is what her identity was. I knew from the first book, Shadows of the Past, she was a detective with the Memphis Police Department. She was organized, neat, followed a plan and had a strong sense of duty.

I put those personality traits into Google and found several links to the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI)

I discovered there were several personality types that fit this profile—ISTJs (whose profile name is Duty Fulfiller) and INTJ (whose profile name is Scientist). Both are Introverts, perfectionists, detailed planners with to-do lists. I decided Livy was the Scientist-type. I wanted her to be able to envision things, foresee likely effects based on what she felt.  www.differencebetween.net/science/nature/difference-between-istj-and-intj

My character, Livy, quite rudely insisted she was an ISTJ, the Duty Fulfiller. That unlike the Scientist, she accumulated data and used it to solve problems. She focused on what’s happened in the past to decide what will happen in the future. Conversely, the scientist-type personality bases what they think will happen on their intuition. And she would never throw out some radical idea for everyone to follow.

After thinking about it, I agreed. But I got even. The hero of the book is Livy's opposite, an extrovert, fly-by-the-seat-of-your-pants private investigator. He-he-he.

Patricia Bradley lives in North Mississippi and is a former abstinence educator and co-author of RISE To Your Dreams, an abstinence curriculum. But her heart is tuned to suspense. Patricia’s mini-mysteries have been published in Woman’s World, and her debut novel, Shadows of the Past, is the first of three set in Mississippi and will release February 4, 2014. She will present a workshop, Writing 50,000 words in 30 days, at the Mid-South Christian Writer’s Conference. www.midsouthchristianwriters.com




  




Thursday, January 9, 2014

Guest Blogger: Tracy Crump


The Write Start


Every seat in the auditorium was full, and still people kept coming through the doors. Standing alone at the side of the room, I looked out over the crowd. Not one familiar face. I had chosen one of the largest Christian writers conferences in the country to attend as my first conference. What was I thinking?

Though overwhelming, the conference turned out to be a good experience and jump-started my career. But after attending conferences of varying sizes since, I know a smaller one would have been a better first choice.

The Mid-South Christian Writers Conference is also starting out, just as I was a few years ago. The number of attendees is limited, which will allow us to provide the closeness and one-on-one attention writers need to get “the write start.” At the same time, we’ve attracted a diverse group of workshop leaders that will minister not only to new writers’ needs but also to those of more experienced writers. Most importantly, we’ve wrapped the entire conference in prayer, asking God to oversee the proceedings.

We’ll have veteran authors presenting on writing novels, marketing through social media, and many other topics. But remembering those early days, I asked to present a workshop on query letters—a term I didn’t even know existed when I attended that first conference. (Boy, was I green!) A query letter introduces the writer to an editor and starts that writer down the road to publication.

Please join us on March 8, 2014, for the first Mid-South Christian Writers Conference and get the “write” start to your writing career. For more information, go to http://www.midsouthchristianwriters.com/index.html.

Tracy Crump
MSCWC Registrar
Tracy Crump has published in Focus on the Family, Mature Living, Parent Life, Light & Life, and other magazines. A dozen of her stories have appeared in Chicken Soup for the Soul books, and she has written numerous devotions for publication. Tracy has served on staff at writers conferences and co-founded Write to Life Workshops with Marylane Wade Koch. Together, they present one-day workshops and webinars and co-edit The Write Life, a free monthly e-newsletter which includes story callouts. Visit Tracy at www.WriteLifeWorkshops.com