About Me

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I have two novels published and currently for sale ~ Welcome To My Life & Love You, Love Your Work, Let's Do Lunch! Check your fav booksellers online. I also write screenplays, teleplays, and shorts. I currently work as a writer and an artist in Los Angeles. Visit me on myspace www.myspace.com/michelinemcallister

Thursday, September 30, 2010

Ten Ways To Improve Your Writing~

When I was logging into one of my other blogs this morning, I came across this blog and loved it so much I thought I would share with you!

http://broadsideblog.wordpress.com/2010/09/28/ten-ways-to-seriously-improve-your-writing/

Ten Ways To (Seriously) Improve Your Writing

In Media, Money, behavior, business, culture, entertainment, work on September 28, 2010 at 2:18 pm
Author Margaret Atwood attends a reading at Ed...

Margaret Atwood: "Put your bum in the chair!" Image via Wikipedia

It’s commonly said, (among writers who do it for their living), that blood to a surgeon is like rejection to a writer — a necessary part of every day’s work.

Whether a surgeon likes blood is irrelevant. Do professional writers — and ambitious amateurs — enjoy rejection?Irrelevant.

It’s not a game for delicate souls, whether you are paid for your work or hope to, or do not.

I’ve earned my living selling my writing since my sophomore year of college; here are ten issues professionals/ambitious writers take seriously:

1) Study writing. No, you don’t have to sign up to be an English major or get an MFA or try to get into the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. But if you truly want to improve your work, you’ll put your bum in the chair (as Margaret Atwood told me when I asked her how to write) and put your work before the skilled, experienced eyes of a teacher. That might be a workshop, a writers’ group led by a professional, an on-line class. Great writing, like everything that’s excellent, demands discipline and some training.

2) Study with more than one teacher. Every writing teacher has his or her quirks and habits, and the worst students learn to mimic them in order to curry favor. Bad idea.

3) Know what you want to say. Simply emoting about your mean Dad or drunk Mom may feel terrific and be cathartic for you, but without adding clarity, insight and polish, it’s rarely sufficiently satisfying to your readers. What larger, ongoing, universal truth(s) do you also plan to elucidate?

4) It’s all about the reader. Not you. Not impressing your BFF or writing pals whose enthusiasm and support are lovely, but ultimately totally distracting. They are to a writer’s growth as a Mom’s cheering your soccer game are to a coach’s whistle, drills and experienced observations.

5) Who is your reader? Who do you want to read your material? Everyone. Bah! Think again. Car manuals and cellphone instructions and IKEA literature are written to appeal to “everyone.” Who’s your best reader? Do you crave the undivided attention of suburban moms? Ex-addicts? Current addicts? Fellow lovers of hummingbirds/hiking/sushi/petanque? Decide who you most want to grab by the lapelsand write for them. Because not everyone is going to love your work. If they do, be very nervous. It’s not necessarily a good sign.

6) Read your work out loud. Yup. Your dog/cat/budgie won’t mind a bit. Artists look at their paintings in a mirror to catch it from a different angle. Reading your words out loud immediately alerts you to their cadence, rhythm, alliteration. Do they sound good? Do you want to hear more?

7) Let it cool down. Baked goods removed from the oven and consumed too soon — before cooling into the finished product — shred, crumble and waste the energy you spent creating them. Good writing should wait a while before it’s consumed by anyone other than yourself. Great writing can wait even longer. Write something and put it aside for 20 minutes, two days, two months. It will always read better after distance and reflection because you’ll see its flaws and have the dispassion with which to fix them.

8) Criticism is key to success. You’ve got to put your work out there — for review, criticism, thoughtful replies. Your work must be read by serious and ambitious writers/teachers/agents/editors. Some of them will have the skill to offer helpful insights, (some of which may surprise you or make you uncomfortable), and the generosity to do so.

9) You are not your writing. Until or unless you can separate yourself from the most intimate and private thoughts you share publicly, you’re toast — because you’ll overly personalize even thoughtful-but-challenging comments on your work as an attack on you. Wrong! As one pro writer friend told me, when I had to revise 10 chapters (there are only 12!) of my new memoir: “You’re a mechanic. Fix the engine.”

10) Rejection is essential. For many reasons. It means you’re actually putting your work and ideas out into the intellectual marketplace. Picture a bustling farmers’ market. Is everyone selling the same amount as quickly? Probably not. They know, and hope for, the best — a percentage of their goods to sell. If they go home with an empty truck, score! But they are wise not to expect it because they, like many others, took the risk of working hard to grow it, truck it and put it out for sale. No farmer expects buyers to coo over the beauty of their rutabagas. They have nutured their products with much hard work — but are able to remember that they are selling a product.

I have sold two non-fiction books to two commercial publishers. (And written another four or five full-length book proposals, circulated to many editors, that did not sell.) I’ve been through six agents, three of whom were very good, one of which — the final one — is truly excellent.

She’s very tough! We’ve even had shouting matches on the phone, as two hard-headed perfectionists hammer it out. Better to have so demanding an expert than some chatty, happy milquetoast who can’t sell my stuff.

Every day, these editors and the agents who put our work before them, are inundated with competitors. Both of my books were rejected by 25 others before they were bought. My agents kept on plugging because, as good agents do, they believed in the projects and in me.

What if I’d just given up, in floods of weeping and teeth-gnashing despair, after the 11th or 14th — or second — rejection?

Monday, September 27, 2010

Nora Roberts Quote

Thought this was a great quote for the day!

"The most important thing is you can't write what you wouldn't read for pleasure. It's a mistake to analyze the market thinking you can write whatever is hot. You can't say you're going to write romance when you don't even like it. You need to write what you would read if you expect anybody else to read it."
~ Nora Roberts

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Manuscript Evaluation Service

This is awesome!!
Forget entering a bunch of contests, this is a great way to get feedback. Also I strongly recommend joining writer's groups, but because we are all so busy, I know that can be hard.

:0) Check this out from the Romantic Times Book Reviews!

Manuscript Evaluation Service


If you are getting rejection slips on a book that you really believe in, or if you just want to know if the first three chapters of your current work is commercial material, the RT BOOK REVIEWS Manuscript Evaluation Service can help.

We have compassionate, experienced editors, who also read for New York publishing houses, and who are dedicated to helping you improve your work and get published. They will read your submission and then prepare for you a detailed, written critique, complete with suggestions on how to fix whatever it is they feel misses the mark. Their feedback is candid and professional--something that friends can't always give to you, and something that the publishing houses editors don't have time to give you.

All you need to do is send a copy of your work to RT BOOK REVIEWS Manuscript Evaluation Service. Include SASE for the return of your material. An accompanying cover letter is helpful to the evaluator; mention any rejections the manuscript has already received, or just feel free to ask whatever questions concern you. Allow four weeks for the critique to be prepared and returned to you.

If you would like more information on our manuscript evaluation service, e-mail nancy@RTBookReviews.com or call the RT office at (718) 237-1097 (ext. 12) (Mon.-Fri, 8am - 4pm EST).

PRICE GUIDE

$35--Query Letter (1pp. max.)
What to include, what to exclude, how to turn your query into an effective selling tool.
(A query letter is required by most publishing houses.)

$50--Synopsis (4 pps. max.)
Learn where your plot falls apart or fails to make sense, how to make it clearer, more representative of what your story is about, and a more effective selling tool.

$50--Opening (20 pps. max.)
Do the first 20 pages grab the reader? Is your style appropriate? How to improve on these crucial first pages.

$100--Partial Manuscript (Synopsis and first 3 chapters; 60 pps. max.)
Editors will ask for this package if interested by the query.

For Full Manuscripts:
• Up to 250 pps--$225
• 251-325 pps--$250
• 326-400pps--$275
• 401-500 pps--$300

For larger manuscripts, please add $25 more per every additional 75 pages.

All categories and costs are based on 250 words per page. Please make sure that manuscripts are printed in 12-point type, double-spaced, with indented paragraphs. Please number, and include your name and title on each page.

Make your check payable to RT BOOK REVIEWS, or call us at (800) 989-8816 (Mon.-Fri, 8am - 4pm EST) to pay by credit card.

Please send your submission to:

MS Evaluation Service
RT BOOK REVIEWS
55 Bergen Street
Brooklyn, NY 11201

Crafty and Humorous~A Review of My 2nd Novel

Love You, Love Your Work, Let's Do Lunch!
Love You, Love Your Work, Let's Do Lunch!
by Micheline McAllister



0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Crafty and Humorous, August 18, 2010
Ashling Donovan decides to move from Des Moines to Los Angeles in hopes of becoming a successful teleplay writer. After moving in with her boyfriend, Ashling sets her sights on securing a job. But when said boyfriend unexpectedly breaks up with her for a Myspace girl, Ashling is desperate for a job, a home, and money. When she shows up to interview as a PA, Ashling is seized with an opportunity, a lie, that could change her life. Overnight, Ashling becomes a widely known head writer, creator of a new show, and her own personal assistant, all in one. But will the truth about her double life identity be discovered- and ruin her Hollywood reputation?

Love You, Love Your Work, Let's Do Lunch! is Micheline McAllister's second novel, and just as filled with juicy Hollywood secrets as the first. It was comical to read how people in LA will fall all over themselves trying to name drop, and what some people will do to get ahead. I highly enjoyed reading Ashling's tale from an Iowa nobody to a big name in Hollywood, all because of a well crafted lie. I did think a couple times that there was no possible way someone could make up being a well respected writer, but in the land of celebrities, I guess almost anything is possible. I think chick lit readers will find humor in this novel, appreciate good writing, and be able to escape in the heroine's double life.

Samantha from Chick Lit Plus review

Happy Sunday!

I hope you are all having a fabulous weekend!
I am starting a new novel this week and am already super excited with the way the outline is coming out!
I will def. be posting snippets and excerpts from it as I go.

In other fun news:

Please check out some of the links I posted today and blogs I follow, because I know you will love them as much as I do.

I'm also hoping to get more followers, so I hope you'll share my blog on your blogs etc.

Thanks so much and have a fabulous fun day!

XoXo Mi

Friday, September 24, 2010

Caitlin Crews Has New Book Out Oct 1st!

Check out Caitlin Crews' new book, which comes out October first, but is already shipping from Amazon.
I lifted this blog from the fabulous Megan Crane (AKA Caitlin Crews) which talks about her new book! I am sure you will love it! I just ordered it and can't wait!!



Sheikh Tariq bin Khalid Al-Nur is as treacherous and formidable as the desert land he wants to rule. But he cannot take the throne of his country until he marries. Why, then, has he not wed? Tariq cannot rid his dreams of ordinary but bewitching Jessa Heath!

Jessa knows she and Tariq have unfinished business. What if she were to take control and allow herself the one night he's offering to put their passion to rest? But Jessa is treading dangerous ground! It would only take that night to reveal the secret she has so desperately kept hidden….


There are a lot of reasons this book is special to me. First, it's my second Presents, my second romance novel. The truth is, I kind of thought my first book was some kind of glorious fluke. I didn't know why they bought it. I was over the moon! But this second one--this proved it wasn't a fluke after all.

I also set the book partly in and around York, England, where I lived for about five years. I had a complicated relationship with the place, as you do, but in this book I got to simply revel in its beauty. And it really is beautiful:



I imagined the letting agency where Jessa works, where she first sees Tariq again, to be on a little street like this:


It was a lot of fun to go back--if only via my computer.

But the biggest reason this book is special to me is because of a choice Jessa makes five years before the book opens, a choice that has far-reaching consequences. I'll be talking more about that choice over at I Heart Presents next week. I'll tell you that it's very close to my heart. Can Jessa live with her decision--and more to the point, can Tariq live with the decision she made? Can they overcome it--together?

You'll have to read the book to find out. I hope you do--and that you love it as much as I do.

My Novel Available Again

Finally my second novel is available through Barnes & Noble again! It was for a couple years, then this summer something happened with the publisher and it wasn't. Now it is!

Yay!

http://search.barnesandnoble.com/Love-You-Love-Your-Work-Lets-Do-Lunch/Micheline-McAllister/e/9781424172627/?itm=1&USRI=micheline+mcallister

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Welcome to 66 Star Street


I recently read Marian Keyes novel, The Brightest Star In The Sky and I LOVED it! I always love her work, but this one seemed to really make an impact on me.
I loved the storlines with Katie and Slasher Hathaway. I loved Matt and Maeve. I even enjoyed Grudge and Fionn, and who wouldn't enjoy Lydia's life. The story, like all Keyes' novels is set around several people's lives and yet they all are connected.
I think she does a great job of describing very serious situations in a way that makes them readable and easy to understand, as well as adds a light heartedness to her characters; even in the darkest of moments. This book is a bit more serious than some of her others, but I enjoyed it all the same.

I really hope you pick up this book, because if you are a fan of Marian, you will love it!

Here are two reviews I nicked off Amazon:

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. Keyes delivers a dizzying vertical view of the mismatched, mixed-up tenants of Dublin's 66 Star Street, friends and lovers who grow up, grow old and give way to their heart currents with help from a puckish sprite. This multitiered saga of Dubliners searching for the brightest star in the sky... the planet of love straddles slapstick and sophistication in an engaging balancing act both giddy and grand. Here's Katie, publicist, freshly 40, and her workaholic, commitment-phobic fella, Conall; newlyweds Maeve and Matt, who hide a violent and crippling secret that binds them and drives them apart; madcap, sassy Lydia, a taxi driver who juggles worries about her aging mom and an over-the-top passion (mixed with equal parts lust and disdain) for her sexy flatmate; plucked from nowhere hunk Fionn, who hopes to begin a TV career, and his psychic foster mom and her mean-as-a-snake dog who improbably helps bring all the sweet mayhem to a satisfying close. Keyes (This Charming Man) is an expert at weaving dark threads into cozy material, and in this ambitious outing, she's in top form. (Jan.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

A mysterious spirit is hovering over the building at 66 Star Street in Dublin, and this spirit is on a mission to change someone’s life. The spirit, however, is unclear on whom this someone will be. It could be Matt and Maeve, the newlyweds suffering with a terrible secret. Or Lydia the cabbie, who rooms with two sullen Polish nationals and spends most of her time worrying about her mother. Or maybe Katie, the newly 40 PR person with a flash job and a flashier boyfriend but who is still unfulfilled. Or Jemima, the elderly psychic, currently hosting her adopted son, Fionn, while he auditions for a TV show. The spirit slides back and forth between floors, hiding in shoes and peeking at photographs, learning all it can about the Star Street residents, and in doing so unknowingly interlocks each person’s life with his or her neighbors’, whether they like it or not. While the premise may sound silly, popular Keyes expertly develops it to create genuinely human and believable characters within a substantial and gratifying story. --Hilary Hatton

Saturday, September 18, 2010

It's a "Short" Morning.

Good morning folks! Today I just wrote a new short for Katie Rogers, okay to be honest, Stephanie did, my alter. I will definitely be posting the link-it should be up on Monday!

I am very excited about it and happy to have so many created outlets for my work.

Otherwise, I am outlining my latest novel, Waiting For Mr. Darcy, as we speak. But first I a bit of goofing off in San Francisco for the afternoon. I always make sure to have breaks, especially because I live in California. I mean, people come from all over the world to do what I can do every day. :0)

Happy writing!

xoxo Mi

Friday, September 17, 2010

Welcome to my new blog!

Hello there everyone! I decided to start a new blog all about my writing adventures, authors I love, books I love and just fun stuff~
Hope you'll come back a lot!
xoxo Mi