November is Picture Book Month! This international literacy initiative, founded by author and storyteller Dianne de Las Casas, celebrates the print picture book during the month of November. Check out the Picture Book Month website, which will feature daily posts from “picture book champions” and has lots of great classroom and storytime resources! Continue reading Celebrating Picture Book Month!
1000 is the Magic Number
For me it is, anyway. As in 1000 words per day. Ever since I started the draft of my newest work in progress, I have committed to writing 1000 words per day as a manageable amount, and this morning I hit 18,000 words after two weeks. This is lightning fast, for me. It’s a new era for this tortoise.
Years ago, when I first started writing, I couldn’t give myself word count goals – too frightening, too much pressure. So I set time limits for myself. I had to work for an hour at a time. I made myself a CD that was exactly an hour long and I had to keep at it, even if I was just staring at the screen, until the last song was over. The first 30 to 45 minutes were usually agony, but by the time that hour was up, I was hitting “repeat” on the CD player. That tactic got me through several manuscripts. Continue reading 1000 is the Magic Number
Another Sneak Peek
So remember a few weeks ago, when I posted 7 lines from a recent work-in-progress because the current one was too formless for such things? Well, maybe the 777 Meme has burned itself out by now, but I am bringing it back because I am so excited that the as-yet-untitled sequel to my as-yet-untitled debut now has words on pages (over 6000, even!).
Set-up: this story is from the point of view of a different main character than the first book, but I am not going to tell you who because it would spoil the end of the first book. 🙂 So I will give a very broad description of the plot: this story is about a character from a privileged background struggling to find her place in a new world where the things that made her special no longer matter.
I am supposed to post the first full 7 lines on the 7th page, starting 7 lines down. Here you go:
A Sneak Peek from Victoria J. Coe
Kathy says: In my last post, I shared a preview of a current work in progress as part of the 777 Meme, and tagged seven other authors, including my fellow Sweet Sixteen, Middle Grade author Victoria J. Coe, to do the same. Victoria took this summons seriously, but with no blog of her own, what was she to do? I wasn’t about to let her off the hook so easily, so I invited her to guest post here!
Thank you to the brilliant and fabulous Kathy MacMillan for tagging (and hosting) me for the 777 meme!
The rules:
- Go to the 7th line of the 7th page of your work in progress.
- Post the first full 7 lines.
- Tag 7 friends.
It’s fun. It’s scary. What writer could resist?
Scary Starts and Fictional Census Results
It’s been a weird couple of weeks, writing-wise. I submitted my latest revision of the novel-that-has-no-name-yet to my editor, and now I have turned to something scarier: writing Book 2. The thought of doing in less than a year what took me almost ten years to do the first time is, well, terrifying, but we’ll see what happens. There is a character who just demands to have her story told, so I guess I am going to have to give in to her.
As well as I knew my world the first go-round, I found that it was not nearly enough for this one. This point-of-view character has a much broader education and experience of the world than the main character of my first book, and so I am learning things I never knew before. I’ve spent the last few weeks doing things that don’t feel like writing but are a necessary prerequisite – lots of brainstorming and making charts and maps and background materials. I’ve even pulled out a couple of books I bought about ten years ago, thinking that they might help with world-building someday, and it turns out that Past Me was correct.
Here they are:
These are lesson-planning books for middle school teachers to guide students in a project researching various cultures and cities and then inventing their own. These books have turned out to be great writer’s guides. They help you think of all the angles on a culture, from the religious beliefs to the role of women to currency and games and sports. I’ve ended up making a giant chart with all the major cultures represented in my story, and filling in these areas has led to some fascinating realizations, connections, and relevant story ideas.
And now, when someone asks what I did at work today, I can answer, “I wrote up census results for a fictional culture.” How many people get to say that?

