Showing posts with label The Vent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Vent. Show all posts

Saturday, November 29, 2008

my.best.words.ever.

If I had two minutes in a room with a publisher to prove my talent as a writer, this is the paragraph I'd read aloud to them (from my unpublished novel The Brownstone):

Nile turned and rushed across the room, her footsteps barely audible as she ran up the thickly carpeted staircase. Claudette followed behind her slowly, running her fingers along the intricately detailed banister as she went. It immediately felt familiar, even though it’d been years and years since the last time she’d sat at her father’s side and watched him work, no, create the masterpieces for which he received the accolades of men who from one side of their mouths praised his work and from the other side offered him pennies on the dollar as payment for it. He rarely took their money, though. Instead--with his head hanging low and his rough, soiled hands clutching an old worn cap--he would ask for the scratched, ragged pieces of old furniture that people like these always seemed to have stacked and strewn about in their garages or storage sheds. They always obliged, thinking their faces cleverly hid the ridicule in their eyes as they watched this seemingly foolish, uneducated black man haul away what they believed to be worthless junk. They never bothered to stay in their doorways for very long, though, or they would have seen the smirk on his face at having so easily acquired priceless period pieces that would be restored and sold back to these same unsuspecting families as antiques at, of course, exorbitant prices they were all too willing to pay.

Every now and then, Claudette recalled, there were those pieces that took even her father’s breath away as he restored them. Some of these he brought into their home for her mother, a woman who recognized and appreciated their value, even to the point of drawing up a will that would ensure they be passed on to her daughter and down through the family for generations to come. Other pieces seemed to mysteriously disappear from his workshop without explanation, though there had always been plenty of ugly rumors floating about. Her father, of course, denied them all. And young Claudette always chose to believe him…even though there was that one time when she and Daddy visited Velda Hodges--a pretty, soft-spoken schoolteacher who lived two towns over--and Claudette sat down on a fancy sofa just like the one her father had been working on in his workshop several weeks before. Even then she was sure there was a good explanation for it.

Monday, November 10, 2008

Will Sing for Money to Self-Publish

Seriously.

Times are tough financially. It's hard enough to pay for the necessities of life, much less keep up a website (which is why mine is currently down) or spend money self-publishing a book.

So I'm tapping into my other talents to try and put together a few extra dollars to go to print. I'd love to do some studio work. And I'd love to do a little voiceover work too. I can't afford the demos necessary to get the attention I need to book the jobs, so I did a quick YouTube video and I'm hoping someone will stumble across it and contact me to sing a hook...or do a radio commercial...or something behind-the-scenes like that.

You get the idea.

So if you're someone who has a PAYING gig for which I could use my voice, then drop me a line here at my blog. Thanks!

Oh, and yay me for losing another 15 pounds (65 down...many more to go)!

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

What Do You Do When You Can't Sleep?

You write. That's what I'm doing right now. It's 1:30AM in the morning, and I can't sleep. I hate laying in bed, staring at the ceiling, so I'm staying up to write until I get so tired that I can no longer sit upright.

That's the luxury of being in bad health, semi-reclusive and out on Disability. No two days are alike. No two nights are alike, for that matter. Oh yes, I've got The Life (she said, her words dripping with sarcasm).

Good lord, I hate this path I'm currently walking. Some way, somehow, I have to figure out how to get off Disability and write full-time. Some way somehow...

Sunday, October 21, 2007

The Ignorance of Some People

I recently read at EURweb.com that veteran producer Debra Martin Chase has made a deal with author Alisa Valdes-Rodriguez to adapt her book The Dirty Girls Social Club to the big screen. Now, I've never read this book so I don't know what it's about. But I'm always glad to see an author's work taken to the next level.

The sad part of it is that Ms. V-R's joy was diminished a bit because of some of the comments made in response to the deal. It seems some EURweb readers felt Ms. M-C had sold out because she, as a prominent African-American, had taken on a project that actually (gasp) featured non-African-American characters.

Um, what's the problem?

In this day and age, are we (some of us) really hatin' on each other because one of us chooses to step outside our immediate culture to conduct business? Are we really that ignorant? And exactly how far does the ignorance extend? Should we no longer read books by non-African-American authors? What about television? Are we supposed to turn away from shows that don't feature black characters or that weren't penned by black writers? What kind of sense does that make?

I swear, we are our own worst enemies sometimes. Too many times. Let's move on, shall we? And as for you, Alisa V-R, write on, hermana! Write on.

If the Publishing Industry Was Like the Music Industry

I get frustrated sometimes that musical artists (and in some cases, I use that term really really loosely) get so much glory for their creative expressions. It makes me wish sometimes that I'd taken that record deal I was offered on my last day of high school back in June 1987 rather than pursue this writing thing. Before I let the years slip by. Before I gained all this weight. Before my dreams began to die. Before, well, just before Life took me over.

I mean, I walked right into the deal. My choir teacher played a song I'd recorded over the loudspeaker in dedication to my graduating class. I remember running from homeroom in embarrassment, because I hadn't yet fully accepted my gift at that time. Next thing I know, a man claiming to be a producer breaks through the growing crowd of people now surrounding me. He asks my name, tells me he wants to give me a deal, put me in the studio, make me a star, et cetera. I take his card to be polite, and then he gets swallowed up by the crowd and he's gone. I don't even remember his face; couldn't tell you what he looked like. I just know that it wasn't until later that day that I learned that he truly was a producer who was in the building visiting my choir teacher at the very moment my song played over the loudspeaker. He'd heard me sing for less than three minutes and he knew that he wanted to give me a deal. Just like that.

What if the publishing industry was like that? What if it was possible, as a complete unknown, to get a book deal based on the talent a writer exhibits in a two-page prose piece or a short story? If that was the case, I feel sure I'd have a deal by now!

Oh well, time will bring me closer to my dreams.

Friday, March 03, 2006

And So I Wait...

I'm gonna leave Hollywood alone.

See, I've had a script at a MAJOR (and I do mean MAJOR) production company for a few months now. My agent has been working diligently, doing her thing, taking meetings, making phone calls. And we're now at the point where they're trying to attach actors to the project, which will determine whether or not they will buy the script and move forward.

My nerves are wrecked.

I'm trying to keep my mind off of it. I'm trying to focus on those projects that I can control. Like the Reggie Brown series. And The Brownstone. And K My Name Is Kendra, which I'm writing for our impressionable teenage sisters (because I think they're being ignored literarily). And The Micness because The Brownstone release date keeps changing from week to week and I feel like I need to put something out there so people don't peg me as just a children's book author (and there is not a thing wrong with that, but I'm just sayin'...) and ignore all my other work.

But I can't help but think about this script. The waiting...oh, the waiting. I just can't take it! How do screenwriters do this project after project??

So I've decided...if they do end up buying this script, I'm gonna count my blessings, cash my check, and then I'm done with Hollywood. Period.

Then again, I do have this other completed script...and then there's still my file of incomplete movie treatments and storylines ready to be pitched at a moment's notice...

sigh