Cheryl Angst, Writer

Writer of strange tales – because no one ever accused me of being normal.

SiWC 2012 Silly Writing Contest October 21, 2012

Filed under: Writing — Cheryl Angst @ 9:51 pm
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Before I delve into the topic for this post, let me say, in no uncertain terms, the Surrey International Writers’ Conference is MADE OF WIN.

I am an incredibly socially awkward person, yet I don’t have enough fingers or toes to count the number of people I chatted with over the past four days. People from all over the Lower Mainland, people from around the province, people from across Canada, and even people who flew in from other countries to take part in one of the pre-eminent writing conferences in North America.

Many amazing things happened throughout the course of the weekend–one moment has likely changed the course of my writing career forever–but tonight I want to talk about the annual Silly Writing Contest.

I’m sure you’ve seen this type of contest before. Writers are given a story prompt (or beginning) and are required to finish it within a certain word count. Sometimes the contest is made more challenging by having an additional requirement where contestants must include certain words within their entry (Janet Reid frequently runs these sort of contests on her blog).

Anyway, hundreds of attendees entered, and three were chosen as the winning entries in the 20th Anniversary edition of the contest. As luck would have it, mine was one of those three!

Before I post my entry (because I am quite proud of it), I need to preface it. First, the conference had a theme: the roaring 20′s. Second, bestselling author Michael Slade writes and narrates Shock Theatre every year, putting his signature spin on tales of horror from decades past (this year he managed to mash up The Fly, Jeckyll & Hyde, Jack the Ripper, and a smattering of 50 Shades of Grey into an amazing retelling of H.G. Wells’s The Time Machine). There was much noir-esque description throughout the performance, as well as a dramatic abuse of alliteration (followed by the breaking of the fourth wall–writers take note–to point out the alliteration).

Now that I’ve given you a little context for the contest, here’s what we were asked to do:  We had to finish the following story in 75 words or less, and our entries had to include the words: gangster, twentieth, fringe, vamp, prohibition, and zozzled. Yes, zozzled is a real word. Google it if you don’t believe me.

The story starter:

Mike Slade’s jaw was long and bony, his chin a jutting angle under a thin mouth. His eyebrows angled too, giving him the look of a pleasantly greying Satan.

“Yeah, sweetheart?” he said to his assistant, Eileen Sea.

She was a real looker, her lips a slash of red above pearls and a dress of thin wool that clung to her like a lost kitten.

She finished shutting the door behind her, leaned against it and said: “There’s a girl to see you, Boss. Her name’s Miz Espenson.”

“A customer?”

“I guess so. You’ll want to talk to this one. She’s a knockout.”

He grinned wolfishly. “A knockout with a problem?”

“A big problem. It’s her – husbands, Boss. I think they might be…”

And here’s where entrants had to fill in the rest.

Wanna know what I wrote?

Yeah, well I’m going to tell you anyway, so pffft.

Here’s my winning entry:

“A big problem. It’s her – husbands, Boss. I think they might be… zozzled.”

Slade frowned.

Widows seeking solace were one thing, but married dames weren’t worth dodging bullets.

“What’s the matter; the vamp’s for prohibition? They a fringe group of Amish?”

Slade eyed Eileen’s gorgeous gams—“gorgeous gams;” writers take note—and wondered if she’d let him run his letter opener through her envelope.

“This is the twentieth time it’s happened.”

“She should hire a gangster.” He fumbled in his pocket. “We’ve got mail needs tending to.”

By the way, the judging panel dubbed it, “50 Shades of Silly Writing.” I couldn’t have been more flattered.

Here’s hoping there’s another twenty great years of SiWC! :)

 

Camp NaNoWriMo June 9, 2012

Filed under: Writing — Cheryl Angst @ 11:04 pm
Tags: , , , , , ,

All right, it’s time to confess. I can’t live with the secret any longer.

Sometime around 11:30 p.m. on May 31st, I decided to kick my a$$ out of its slump and get back in the writing saddle. (I may or may not tell you about my slump at some point, but all you really need to know right now is I haven’t been writing – which is pretty deadly for, you know, a writer.)

I love NaNoWriMo. I thrive on structure and goals, and NaNo feeds into my type-A personality perfectly. Camp NaNoWriMo is similar (although the prizes aren’t as good, but as I have a beef with CreateSpace’s new prize structure, I suppose neither’s prizes are all that wonderful, but I digress), in that participants sign up and attempt to write 50,000 words in the month of June.

(You can go to camp again in August too.)

Camp NaNo has been the shove I needed to get writing again. I don’t know what it is about bar graphs, and funky little dart boards, but whatever it is, they totally work for getting me to get words on the screen. I have sat at this computer every night, so far, in June and cranked out more than 1,000 words each time.

Yes, I know you need to average 1,667 words a day to reach 50,000, but as I mentioned earlier, I haven’t been writing – AT. ALL. It was all I could do to open a blank word doc and place my fingers on the keyboard. I had serious butterflies and the shakes. I needed to start writing again or go crazy, but something was holding me back.

Camp NaNo was my breakthrough solution. I’m not going to ‘win’ this month. I will not reach 50,000 words by June 30th, and that’s okay because I’ve already won. I beat the fear inside and started writing again. I’m rusty, and the stuff coming out is drivel, but with every keystroke my skills are returning. By the end of the month I will have 30,000 words (my goal is 1,000 words a day), and will be well on my way to recovering the groove I was in before the writing stopped.

I don’t know if it will work for you, but if you’re looking for that swift kick in the rear to get you back into the writing habit, you could do worse than to sign up for NaNo or one of their camps.

I’m back, and I have the neato bar graph and bullseye target over at Camp NaNo to thank for it.

C.

PS There are two others who also deserve a huge amount of credit for helping me find my way. They said what needed to be said when I needed to hear it. Thank you. xo

 

Bad Austen Available! October 16, 2011

Filed under: Writing — Cheryl Angst @ 7:00 pm
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Okay, you know way back when (you mean, back when you were actually blogging, hmm?) (stuff it, guilty conscience, this is important)…

Anyway, some indeterminate time ago I entered a short story in the Bad Austen contest and was chosen as one of the stories included in the anthology. Once the jubilation wore off, I promptly forgot all about it. Granted, there were other–more adrenaline inducing–things going on in my writing universe (*waves at Brianne Mulligan, agent extraordinaire*), but still.

Well, I was chatting on gchat with a lovely friend who happened to ask in passing, “Did you see the Austen book is out?” I had not seen this. Had she not mentioned it, I would have continued my existence as if I’d never entered the contest (at least until my complimentary copies arrived on my doorstep). But now I am excited.

Look:

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1440511853/ref=s9_simh_gw_p14_d0_g14_i1?pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_s=center-2&pf_rd_r=0WWCKVXYCB9E4YY3XQHT&pf_rd_t=101&pf_rd_p=470938631&pf_rd_i=507846

Amazon says it has copies available, but it’s not supposed to be out until November 15th. The Canadian online retailers have it listed as a pre-order, so I’m not sure if it came out early in the US, or if Amazon is being sneaky with it’s whole “in stock” with only 5 copies left bit…

Regardless, the book will be out in less than a month!

John and Rebeccah will have their tale of romance splashed across the universe!

C.

 

SiWC Theme Contest Win September 25, 2011

Filed under: Writing — Cheryl Angst @ 9:15 pm
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I decided to take a stab at the SiWC Saturday night theme contest this afternoon…

The puzzle was intriguing. First, you had to read the bios of every presenter in order to find the bolded and underlined letters. This part wasn’t too taxing, but there were a lot of letters and a colon!

After that, you had to unscramble the letters into an unknown number of words. I’ll be honest – at first I looked for an anagram program on the web, but the only ones I found had a maximum of 12 or 13 letters; not good enough when the puzzle contained 25 letters.

So, I was forced to put my thinking cap on. I typed the letters into a Word doc then pulled them out as I made words. I found ‘fantasy’ on my first try, but stumbled when I found I could spell the American version of ‘glamour.’ I decided to try a different tack and found ‘tradition,’ which seemed like a likely candidate given the history of the conference and the costumes. Alas, unless I there was a tradition of fans and swans that wasn’t going to work.

Eventually I stumbled upon ‘imagination’ (it couldn’t be ‘imagine’ as there were no e’s in the puzzle), and when I realized I could do BOTH ‘fantasy’ and i’magination,’ I knew I was onto something. A tweak to ‘word’ to get ‘world,’ and POOF! I had:

The blog post announcing my win!

 I love books! I can hardly wait to pick up my prize at the registration desk… Less than a month to go, folks!

C.

 

 

Wishes and Big Ol’ Fishes June 26, 2011

*Disclaimer: The tale I am about to recount is in no way meant to suggest Janet Reid possesses even the tiniest ounce of “nice,” “kind,” or even “soft-hearted” cartilage in her sharkly form. None whatsoever. NONE, you hear me?*

BEWARE THE SHARKLY ONE!

Okay, then. With that out of the way, let me begin.

You may recall I blogged yesterday about how I’d fared in one of literary agent, Janet Reid’s famous (infamous?) writing contests. If not, you really ought to go back and read that post before going any further here. What? You WANT to know the ending before reading the whole thing? You’re not one of those people who like spoilers, are you? (Because if you are, I so totally am too…)

Sorry, I digressed.

Anyway, tucked away at the bottom of my post was a little comment – well, more like a wish – where I projected my little writer-self into the future and hoped a day would come where the Shark would read one of my books and be so impressed she’d run a contest using words from text I’d written.

I have big hopes for Nikko. Brianne does too. My cheerleader’s arms are going to fall off with all her pom-pom waving. With all this support, I can’t help but believe Nikko is something special.

I was projecting into the future, imagining Ms. Reid reading and loving Nikko – a nice little stroll into fantasyland for me. Until…

Until…

Until I popped by wordpress to check my blog stats. I stared at the spike (not too huge, but noticeable) and said, “Hmm, I wonder what that’s all about?” I scrolled down to look over the search terms people had used to find me (I’m still not sure why anyone Googling debt consolidation, air conditioning, or parole violations would click on my blog, but that’s for another post).

The combination of search terms were all related, and, frankly, made almost as little sense as debt consolidation. And it’s not like these were one-offs… No, more than one person Googled the exact same terms!

“cheryl angst janet reid”

“janet reid & cheryl angst”

Really? Um, Google, why are people looking for Ms. Reid in connection with me?

Several people tried to see if Ms. Reid was the agent who sold The Firestorm Conspiracy (sorry folks, I did that one all on my lonesome long before I wrote the novel that caught my agent’s eye). (My agent is Brianne Mulligan at Movable Type Literary, btw.) (And she’s awesome.)

Sorry, another digression.

Anyway, I was perplexed by the sudden (and significant) number of people checking Ms. Reid and I out, so I wandered back to her blog to see if maybe she’d mentioned my earlier blog post, or accidentally re-posted her reaction to my vlog entry (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5TB8ButGTaI) from a contest organized by literary agent, Kathleen Ortiz.

Nope.

She’d posted a new writing contest.

My jaw hit my keyboard. I think I may have snorted some flavoured water. I nearly toppled off my seat.

This is the contest Janet Reid posted: http://jetreidliterary.blogspot.com/2011/06/that-was-so-much-fun-lets-do-it-again.html

Yes, those words are from my book. She ran a contest about one of my books.

*Please refer back to the disclaimer at the top of this post before you get any ideas about the true nature of the Shark.*

Seriously, go re-read the disclaimer.

Finished?

Good. Now that we’re all in agreement that Janet Reid is to be feared AT ALL TIMES, I can wrap up this post:

Janet Reid, you are a rockstar. If I’m ever in New York (you know, to celebrate Nikko or some other, equally awesome book), I’d love to buy you a scotch. Heck, I’ll buy the whole bottle.

C.

 

Sharkly Praise June 25, 2011

Filed under: Writing — Cheryl Angst @ 10:35 am
Tags: , , , , , ,

Like many authors, I follow a number of writing-related blogs. Some are a holdover from my querying days, but I still follow them because these agents and editors are experts in their fields and an excellent source of what is going on in the publishing world. I enjoy following Janet Reid’s blog because she speaks her mind – honestly and frankly. She also posts links to humorous sites (like Hyperbole and a Half), and, every once and a while, she posts her own writing contests.

I love these little flash fiction contests. I even won one once.

I found myself with a bit of spare time when she posted her latest contest, so I decided to enter. The challenge was to write a story using 100 words or less that incorporated the following words: willing, parrot, intuitionist, dope, and silette. Rather than use the words as written, I chose to break them up in a somewhat creative fashion.

Here’s what I wrote:

Chadwick scowled at the decree nisi. Letters, unless accompanied by officers in uniform, held no sway over him.

Until now.

The dinghy pitched as he smacked the useless mast. He’d asked his father, “What’s wrong with the spar?”

Rotten,” his latest wife had replied, tossing his wardrobe overboard.

“Like you,” his father had added. “I’m cutting you out of the will, ingrate.”

“What am I supposed to do? Pending a passing trawler, I’m screwed.”

The yacht disappeared below the horizon.

Chadwick adjusted the rudder by intuition. Istanbul, he decided, heading for land.

I’d hoped to at least garner a chuckle for my liberal license with the rules. Here’s what Ms. Reid posted:

In addition to this recognition, it turns out the story itself was somewhat well-written as it made the third round of finalists!

I love these little contests and I hope Ms. Reid continues to offer them for the foreseeable future.

C.

Who knows, maybe one day she’ll fall in love with one of my books and choose five awesome words from within its pages…

 

 

Goodreads and Pre-Orders May 11, 2011

Filed under: Writing — Cheryl Angst @ 8:33 pm
Tags: , , , , , , , ,

I’m giving away two free copies of The Firestorm Conspiracy over on Goodreads. I believe in making contests easy, if you’d like to enter, all you need to do is leave a comment in the topic below:

http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/551919-the-firestorm-conspiracy-giveaway

If you’re one of those people who just *has* to spend your hard-earned cash on a book, and you cannot stomach the thought of acquiring a copy for free, a wonderful friend spotted these two options:

http://www.booku.com/The-Firestorm-Conspiracy/Cheryl-Angst/ebook_573386.htm

http://www.booksonboard.com/index.php?BODY=viewbook&BOOK=1043290&v=widget

I can’t believe you can pre-order my book. I’m still struggling to accept the reality of publication, and seeing it available for pre-order (like it’s in hot demand or something) is way too surreal. The advantage of the pre-order is you get it at 12:00 am on May 16th, whereas there might be a few hours’ delay on the larger sales channels.

And look! It’s on sale at Books on Board! All the more reason to snag a copy. :)

Don’t worry, if you want to buy it through Amazon or one of the other BIG stores, I’ll post links on the 16th.

Until then I’m going to pretend I am not checking my inbox every five minutes as I wait for my agent’s response to my revisions on Nikko. Nope. Not me. I am one cool cucumber. *moves mouse over inbox tab*

C.

 

April Update April 22, 2011

I realised I haven’t been very forthcoming with my writing progress over the past several months. I’d love to say it was because I was working on some top secret project that I could only now reveal. Alas, it was simply because I was so focused on the writing I never considered telling you about it.

That, my dear readers, is about to change. Brace yourselves for a no-holds-barred update on where my writing career is at.

At the end of March the textbook people told me to hold off writing the teacher’s guide until they could get me the revisions for the student workbook. I was a little frustrated by this (I’d wondered about the wisdom of writing the teacher’s guide before the student book was set, but the contact only gave me two weeks between the two deadlines and I didn’t want to miss it). I’d hoped this contract would be fulfilled by late March so I could go back to writing fiction.

Given my forced waiting with the math stuff, I decided to finish my NaNoWriMo novel. I promised my cheerleader a sequel to The Firestorm Conspiracy, and I got 55,000 words into it during November, but December led to agents requesting Nikko and eventually the excitement around signing with Brianne Mulligan at Movable Type, so I never finished it.

Oooh, I also had to do several edits and proofs for Firestorm in order to get it ready for publication, and those took a tonne of time. Thankfully, I wasn’t also textbooking.

Life is funny sometimes. I was all excited about my ‘free’ time – I was going to finish my sequel and make my cheerleader ecstatic (or insane, depending on her reaction to the grand finale planned for the book), and then my agent sent me an email. She wanted to let me know she felt the sooner we got Nikko out the better – before all the publishers filled their YA dystopian quotas for the year.

I broke the news to my long-suffering cheerleader and set to work on revising Nikko with my eleven pages of editorial notes as a guideline. My goal was to increase the book’s length by about 20,000 words and change the ending, leaving the story more open to a romantic sequel (I’d left it open for further book[s], but I hadn’t planned on carrying a love triangle through, so that had to change).

I’ve been working steadily on Nikko for three weeks now, and I’ve added close to 13,000 words and four entirely new chapters. I’ve fleshed out one minor character into something of an antagonist, and I’ve gone far deeper into both my main characters’ pasts as well as the world building.

I’ll be honest, it’s hard. My brain does mental gymnastics every time I sit down and tackle a new element. I’m always saying, “Let’s see, how can I…” and then I’m gone – lost in a universe of my own creating. I love it. I love, love, love it. I wanted to get the revisions done by the end of the month, but as I’m only half way through the original version I think I’ll need more than the week remaining.

During a moment of procrastination I decided to submit a short story to a couple of magazines. I’m not expecting a reply for at least four more weeks, but I will let you know as soon as I hear anything.

I am expecting the revision request from the textbook people to arrive sometime next week. As this is something I am under contract for (and they’ve paid me a third of the agreed upon amount), I will have to set Nikko aside to work on them. Hopefully they won’t be too time-consuming and I’ll be able to get back to Nikko shortly thereafter.

On top of all this, I am also planning a launch party for The Firestorm Conspiracy. I can’t believe it will be available to the general public in just over three weeks. My first novel. Published. People other than my husband and mother buying something I made.

*SQUEE*

Phew, I told you this would be quite the update. You may relax now, it’s pretty much over. At the risk of becoming boring or tedious, I will endeavour to update you more often.

C.

 

Bad Austen Contest Results April 18, 2011

Woo hoo!

After waiting and wondering, and emailing and tweeting, the winners of the Bad Austen contest were notified earlier today. I did not win the $250, but my short story, John & Rebeccah: Love ‘Midst the Stars, has been chosen for publication in the anthology coming out in November.

I am thrilled to be adding another publication credit to my name.

I’m even more thrilled by the fact that a story involving the characters from The Firestorm Conspiracy has found its way into a print anthology. :-) The more people who read about, and fall in love with, John and Rebeccah, the happier I will be.

C.

PS – A special shout out to my fellow #badausten tweeters: Thanks for your support throughout the wait! Glad to hear you’re getting responses too. :-)

 

Bad Austen April 14, 2011

The judges announced their pick for the winning entry in the Bad Austen contest.

http://badausten.com/announcement-the-top-votedjudges-picked-entry-winner

I didn’t expect my sci-fi snippet starring characters no one other than my blog readers have heard of to win the cash, and I still have hope the writing is strong enough for it to be chosen for publication in the anthology. Everyone who has their work chosen is supposed to be informed over the next few days. *crosses fingers*

In other news, The Firestorm Conspiracy has been picked up by several book review sites around the globe (USA, UK, and Australia)! I’m totally excited by this – more to see how I’ll handle my first set of “official” reviews than by the reviews themselves. I have no idea how I’m going to react to the comments, and I’m curious to see how it feels.

I promise to post links to the reviews as soon as I have them.

C.

 

 
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