Marin McGinnis on Common Mistakes a Copyeditor Can Catch

Mindy:   Welcome to Writer Writer Pants on Fire, where authors talk about things that never happened to people who don't exist. We also cover craft, the agent hunt, query trenches, publishing, industry, marketing and more. I'm your host, Mindy McGinnis. You can check out my books and social media at mindymcginnis dot com and make sure to visit the Writer Writer Pants on Fire blog for additional interviews, query critiques and more as well as full transcriptions of each podcast episode at WriterWriterPants on Fire.com. And don’t forget to check out the Writer, Writer, Pants on Fire Facebook page. Give me feedback, suggest topics you’d like to hear discussed, and let me know if there is someone you’d love to see as a guest.

Mindy: We are here with Marin McGinnis. Marin is here today to talk about a lot of different things, but one of the things that I wanna focus on specifically is that Marin is a copy editor. So, we're gonna talk a lot about the importance of copy editing and the different things that an individual can do... Maybe beforehand to catch those small mistakes, the most common mistakes. But first... Marin is my cousin, and we found each other because we both have an interest in genealogy, and we found each other through ancestries. How are we related specifically again?

Marin: We are fifth cousins once removed.

Mindy: Our last shared ancestor died in 1825, is that correct?

Marin: That is also correct. One day, maybe, we'll figure out who his parents were and where he came from.

Mindy: I shall never cease. Also, I just think it's really interesting that we are both individuals that are writers and we move in the publishing and the book industry. There could be an argument made that some of it is innate. We'll call it a gift or a talent that you definitely still have to learn some things in order to hone it, but I think it's interesting that we found each other and they we're both writers.

Marin: I think we have a lot of things in common like that, and it is very curious that even though we are five generations and about 12 years apart, we have a lot of similar characteristics. Thinking about that is kind of funny when you think about genetics.

Mindy: We will talk about writing soon. Genetics kind of blow my mind because the old nature versus nurture argument, of course, is always there, but I have friends who have children whose fathers are not present or vacated early on. These children have their mannerisms... Ways that they hold their fork when they eat, like very intimate things that they didn't learn by watching him 'cause he's gone. But they have these very specific little things in facial expressions that man, it's their dad. It's bizarre.

Marin: My kid has some of my father's mannerisms, and they didn't know each other very well at all. So, it is interesting.

Mindy: So, you are a writer, first of all. You are a full-time lawyer and you're really smart, and that's cool.

Marin: Thank you.

Mindy: I kind of introduce you that way to people in my mind, or whenever I'm thinking about you. It's like my cousin Marin, who's a lawyer, because I don't get to say that often. Also a writer, you are published in the romance category, and you are also a copy editor, which is one of the big reasons that I have you here today. So you do offer copy editing and editing services. So that's something that I wanna give you some room to talk about. But first of all, I would love to have you talk a little bit about copy editing, specifically. What it is, how it's different from broad editing, and why it's so important.

Marin: The services that I provide are proofreading, copy editing, and line editing. Proofreading is kind of obvious. You're looking at a finished edited work to just make sure that you catch the little errors that people make in spelling and punctuation and grammar. Copy editing is a step above that, and it is a more substantive review of a manuscript to correct the same kinds of errors, but also to look at syntax of your sentences, ensure consistency in spelling, how you hyphenate things, the fonts that you use, what words you capitalize, and then to note ambiguous or confusing words or sentences. Line editing is a step above that as well, and it's intended to flag issues of overuse words, unnecessary words, run-on sentences, passive voice - just stuff that needs to be tightened... Pacing, structure, use of filler words like "that," and words that can slow down the pacing of your writing to ensure consistency in language. Make sure you spell the character's name the same way every time.

Mindy: One of the things that I hear people getting confused about sometimes is the difference between copy editing and proofreading. Because proofreading, like you said, is a little more just like searching specifically for errors. Copy editing comes down to many different things. They are searching for those as well, and they catch them... Also grammar. 'Cause I do write small town rural areas, often the copy editor will go through and they will fix grammar in dialogue, and I will reject the fix. That is not true to how this character would speak. I am college educated, and I've written 12 books. And I cannot tell you the difference between lay and lie. I've never said whom in my life. So those are things that copy editing will catch, and if it doesn't fit the voice of your character, those are things that you can reject and say, "No. I don't want this character to be speaking with proper grammar." Or even their internal dialogue, at times. To keep the voice correct, grammar may not be your highest priority. 

But one of the things that my copy editors catch the most often - continuity. Continuity is something that we don't always think about - even a timeline. That's my big problem is time. My timelines are always a mess. One of the ways that I specifically get away from it is that I'm not specific ever. So, my characters will say, "Hey, do you wanna go to movie sometime?" They don't say when. They don't say where. They don't say anything specific. I usually, if you're paying attention, won't say anything about time in terms of what month it is. Typically, I will mention a season or an upcoming holiday, if there's like Halloween or Christmas, but I'm not gonna say it's Tuesday, October 27th. I'm not gonna do that because I will mess it up. If I have an anchor somewhere, I won't be consistent. Along those lines, what are some continuity errors that you see occurring really often?

Marin: Time is definitely one of them. Geography is something that I pay attention to. Somebody's writing about somebody who is driving in a car from one place to another, and it takes 15 minutes. I'll actually look at a map. It does not take you 15 minutes. It takes you 45 minutes. If you're gonna use that kind of really specific detail, you have to make sure that it's right. So that's another one that I notice. Somebody has their eyes closed, and they never open them and all of a sudden they're looking at somebody. Point of view kinds of errors, I also note. So somebody is talking to somebody else, and the writer mentions the eyes of the person who's speaking. Well, you can't see your own eyes unless you are looking in a mirror. So those kinds of things are fairly common.

Mindy: Absolutely, in my very first book, Not A Drop To Drink, it was my first experience having a professional copywriter go through my stuff and it was amazing. The things that you don't think about as a writer. There was a scene where the two main characters, they're in a basement. This is a world that doesn't have electricity. It's night. They're underground. There is no light source, and they're having a conversation. And one of them smiles, and the other character sees it. And my copy editor's like, "No. They didn't. Because it's pitch black, and you've said that multiple times. So no. You might be able to hear a smile in their voice, but they didn't see it."

Marin: Those are the kinds of things that you just don't always think about when you're writing the book, and it takes an outsider looking in to say, "Hey, you might wanna think about this."

Mindy: You were talking about level of detail on your end. Looking at a map and deciding how long it would take someone to drive from this place to the next. I had, in one instance... I had said Tuesday, October 27, and my copy editor was like, "Well, Tuesday, October 27th only occurred in the year 2012 or the year 2044." So you have to pick which year this is set in. I'll mention there's a full moon, and they will check the lunar schedule.

Marin: Copy editors are a funky breed. We really get into those weird nitty-gritty details that most people probably don't care about, but if you keep them in there, there will be at least one reader who will say "What?" and throw the book across the room. So you don't want that. You want to be as accurate as possible. If your book is set in the real world on some level, then you need to be precise.

Mindy: That's the kind of stuff that just, as a writer, I get hung up on. And like I said, timelines are my biggest thing. I'm never specific about what my characters look like either. I actually was interviewing Laurell K. Hamilton, she writes the Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter series, and she told me that she has a character whose eye color changes. The series is like 30 books long. So, it's bound to happen. His eye color changes across the course of this series because she just forgot. She forgot what color his eyes were.

Marin: That's what I tend to do the same with my own writing, is that I don't go into too much detail about what the characters look like. Partly because I want readers to be able to imagine the character however they picture them.

Mindy: I also do not physically describe my characters in very much depth at all, if I can avoid it. Partially because, yes, I wanna be consistent, and I know that I won't. But mostly because, like you said, I want the reader to be able to envision this person however they want. I know that when I was younger, junior high, I was reading Lord of the Rings, and for whatever reason, I had the hugest crush on Faramir. Like Faramir was my dude, and I was into him. And at some point, Tolkien says he has a beard, and I was just like "ugh." I was like 12. So I was just like, "That's gross." But I immediately was like, "No, he doesn't. He doesn't have a beard. No, he doesn't." It pulled me out of the story because I had a picture of what Faramir looked like. It was probably Cary Elwes, let's be honest.

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Mindy: Something that I have come across in my own editorial business, and I just actually yesterday was working on a first 10 pages. And the book was written in first person, and I read all 10 pages and they were pretty good. And I gave him some notes, and then I said, "So here's the thing. I don't know your main character's name." Because when you're writing in first person, it's all I and me. They never said her name. What are some other common mistakes that you run into that are either POV or sometimes tense. Tense is the other thing I run into that people have made mistakes.

Marin: I do see tense issues sometimes, although that's rarer. When you start out writing a book in first person, you do generally stay there. You don't tend to switch. I have noticed that if somebody starts a book in one tense and then switches and goes back and re-writes in a different tense, then you can find errors that way. But other errors I see are they have some statement about how one character is feeling or thinking about something, and your POV character cannot possibly know that. There needs to be a little bit of explanation using body language, for example, or expressions or some other indication explained in the narrative about how the POV character can tell how the other character is feeling.

Mindy: Yeah, absolutely. They can infer how they might be feeling, but they cannot say with absolute definity what that character is feeling on the inside because they are not that person.

Marin: Right.

Mindy: So, as someone that moves in both the traditional and the indie world... HarperCollins copy edits. They also then have a proofreader go through them as well. That's all taken care of for me. On the indie side, I do hire out that work, as you know, because I hire you. It is an expense, but it is also a needed one. I can send you something that I think is pretty damn clean and you send it back and it's red marker city. And you just don't see them yourself. So if you can talk a little bit about the importance of a copy editor, if you don't have one built in, in the traditional publishing world.

Marin: A lot of people who are self-publishing probably think... I'm a little guilty of this too. I'm pretty good, and I have beta readers. And they catch a lot of stuff, so I don't really need an editor. Let me give you an example of a book that I edited very recently. It's a romance, and the hero in the book is unwilling to find love, experience love, and tie himself to another person because his mother has a terrible disease that he will pass on to his children. The disease itself, if you yourself don't have the disease... So if your mother has it, but you don't have it and you don't have the gene to pass on the disease, you can't pass it to your children. And no one had caught that. The author didn't know. That kind of thing can really cause a serious issue with your book and readers who know about that disease, unless you make it up, would be like, "This is ridiculous. Totally unbelievable," and will give you terrible reviews. So that's just one kind of extreme example of why you need a copy editor - why you really should spend the money to have someone else do it for you. Because it will catch those kinds of issues in addition to all the nitty-gritty, how you use a comma, how you use a colon.

Mindy: I am super curious. How did that client then fix that book if the entire premise was faulty?

Marin: She hasn't fixed it yet. Afterwards, we were brainstorming ways that she could fix it without rewriting the entire book. She could give the hero the gene for the disease, so he knows that he's gonna get the disease eventually. But that's not really great for a romance when you want them to be a happily ever after, but you know the hero's gonna die of a horrible disease. Another one was finding a different disease. And then another one was not specifying which disease, and I thought, "Well, yeah, you could do that, but the heroine is a nurse. So she's gonna ask."

Mindy: Oh man. She really wrote herself into a corner.

Marin: Yeah, and I feel really bad that I pointed it out, but it's better to point it out before you publish the book and have a reader point it out to you.

Mindy: Oh, absolutely. You want that stuff to get caught ahead of time. And speaking of things getting caught or not caught, what's amazing is that things still get through. One of the reasons I think why you definitely need a copy editor and a proofreader is because the brain is fantastic at auto-filling. The brain will fix things automatically, even though your eye is relaying the visual that is incorrect of the text. Your brain fixes it and doesn't recognize it as an error. So, I don't know if you've seen this before, but your brain actually only processes about every third word that you read, and everything else is auto-filled... That you're not individually processing each word. I thought that was ridiculous, but I remember years ago finding an example of a paragraph that someone had written where they took out every third word, and of course, if the third word is endometriosis, then maybe not. But it was amazing because my brain... I read it and I knew what it said. Even though it was specifically purposely missing words. It is amazing, especially when you as a writer already know things. So your brain auto-fills things or assumes things that isn't actually on the page for the reader. In my first book, Not A Drop To Drink, in the hard cover editions, there is a line of dialogue that is attributed to a character that is dead. There's a mother-daughter duo and the daughter passes away, and they have similar names. When the mother is talking about the daughter who has passed away, she doesn't say her name, but she's speaking about her in the dialogue tag, "dead daughter said." That made it to print. Nobody caught it. The brain was like, "Yeah, we're talking about this person. That's the person that's talking."

Marin: That is actually a common error. When you are using dialogue tags and say that so and so said something, it is very often the wrong character. I do notice that a fair amount. You see it at least once in just about every book.

Mindy: That's amazing. So is that something like... Let's say I'm thinking about my friend Amanda, and I need to call the dentist and make a dentist appointment. And I call my friend Amanda. Is that what's at work there? That the brain is just making free associations?

Marin: I think so actually, and I actually came across this in my day job as a lawyer the other day. One of my paralegals had written "Hi Ashley" in an email that she was drafting, and I said, "Her name is not Ashley. It's Angela." "Oh yeah. I was thinking about Ashley so and so, who is a different client." So I think that what you said makes a lot of sense. That you are... You're thinking about something else, and so your brain puts the two of them together.

Mindy: I did something similar myself just this week. I had a publicist reach out about their author. They wanted to get them on the show. And I emailed them back, and I was like, "Yes. I would love to speak to April in April." Cause April can also be a name. And I was looking at the calendar, and I was like, "This is when I could schedule it in April." And I emailed the publicist, and I said, "Yes. I would love to speak to April in April." I immediately like... Listen, uhh, I know her name. 'Cause she's a pretty famous person... So I was like, "Hey, so... I'm dumb." And she was like, "No. It's okay. It's no big deal." But yeah.

Marin: That's funny.

Mindy: The brain is a funny little thing. We're recording this on March 15th, and my 12th book just came out yesterday. A friend that is a writer, who sent me a text, and she was like, "Hey, congrats. Happy release day. There's a typo in your Goodreads write up. The blurb for the book is wrong." And I was like, "Oh, okay. Cool. Let me know what it is. I'll go fix it." One of the things that happens in the book is there is a flash flood, and on the Goodreads write up it said "flash food." Alright, flash food's not a real thing. I go into the metadata on Goodreads. I fix it to flash flood, and I'm going about my day. I'm trying to do social media. Doing all the stuff you do on release day, and then I was like, Hey, I better check my own site because when it comes to the blurb, but you just copy paste things everywhere. I wonder if I picked that up and used it on my own site. I better make sure that on Mindy McGinnis dot com it's correct. So I go to Mindy McGinnis dot com and sure enough, on the blurb for Long Stretch of Bad Days, it says flash food. I'm like, okay. I go in and I fix it.

And then all of a sudden, this little red flag goes up in my brain, and it's like, "Hey man. I'm pretty sure that you copy pasted that information from the official flap copy from your publisher. You need to go to make sure that that's right on Amazon." And I was like, "Yeah, that's a good point Self." I go over to Amazon, and I look and in the Amazon description it says flash food. Total stomach drop. I was like, "Oh shit." Because that's the catalog copy that gets loaded on Amazon and Barnes and Noble and all of the online stores. That's the official material. And I get up, and I go to my book closet where I have my books. And I pull out A Long Stretch of Bad Days, and I open up the dust jacket. I look at the flap copy on my hard covers. It says flash food. Well, shit. There's nothing we can do. Every single hard cover that was printed has a mistake on the jacket. It happened. There's nothing we can do about it. It's actually kind of funny, and my publisher was like, "Oh my gosh. We are so sorry. We cannot believe this happened." And I'm like, "You know what? That's okay. I didn't catch it either, right?" Like this passes through me and I approve things, but flash food translated in the brains of probably 20 to 30 different professionals in the publishing world as flash flood and nobody caught it.

Marin: I follow a bunch of authors on Facebook and every once in a while, one of them will have a new release and will say, "Oh my God. There's a typo in my book. 25 people looked at it." It happens all the time, and even if you have the world's most careful editors, you're gonna miss something.

Mindy: That's absolutely true. I was reading a book just last night. I was reading a hard cover, traditionally published, pretty big name author, and I found two mistakes in the first 100 pages. I'm pretty sure that's wrong. And I went back, and I read it again. Yep, that's wrong. That's how things are, and nothing is perfect, and this is life.

Marin: Correct.

Mindy: Speaking of having the best possible copy editor in the world... Why don't you, last thing, go ahead and let listeners know where they can find you if they would like to make their own work a little stronger by using your services.

Marin: Absolutely. You can find me at Marin McGinnis dot com. There is a page there which talks about all about my editing services.

Mindy:     Writer Writer Pants on Fire is produced by Mindy McGinnis. Music by Jack Korbel. Don't forget to check out the blog for additional interviews, writing advice and publication tips at Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com. If the blog or podcast have been helpful to you or if you just enjoy listening, please consider donating. Visit Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com and click “support the blog and podcast” in the sidebar.

Laurell K. Hamilton on Writing Real Characters... and Letting Them Have Sex

Mindy:   Welcome to Writer Writer Pants on Fire, where authors talk about things that never happened to people who don't exist. We also cover craft, the agent hunt, query trenches, publishing, industry, marketing and more. I'm your host, Mindy McGinnis. You can check out my books and social media at mindymcginnis dot com and make sure to visit the Writer Writer Pants on Fire blog for additional interviews, query critiques and more as well as full transcriptions of each podcast episode at WriterWriterPants on Fire.com. And don’t forget to check out the Writer, Writer, Pants on Fire Facebook page. Give me feedback, suggest topics you’d like to hear discussed, and let me know if there is someone you’d love to see as a guest.

Mindy: Just a note for my usual listeners. Today's guest is Laurell K. Hamilton, and we will be talking pretty extensively about sex in the second part of this episode after the break. So, if you're someone that doesn't care to listen to that, or if you're someone that likes to listen to this podcast in the car with your kids or somebody you don't want to talk about sex in front of... Probably don't listen to the second part of this podcast. 

We're here with Laurell K. Hamilton, author of the Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter series, as well as the Merry Gentry series, as well as the Zaniel Havelock series. So Smolder, which is the 29th Anita Blake novel, will be coming out on March 21st. Tell us a little bit about Smolder. I think my first question really is, how do you as a writer continue to be excited rolling into book number 29?

Laurell: It's like going back to old friends. But more than that, when I was first setting out to start writing the series, I started putting together the first story in the world in the mid-1980s, late 1980s, and I went and read long-running series. At that time, it was only mystery novels that had long running series, and what I noticed, even the best mystery series, there is a slump for at least one book between book 5 and book 8. You can see the writer is falling a little bit out of love with their world or their character, and it's across the board almost without exception. I think that Robert B. Parker’s Spenser series didn't have it, but it's almost the only one. Even if the book is good, there's just a little less joie de vivre in the process. So I thought, "Why are they falling out of love with their characters?" They usually get back on the train, and they're happy after that, but there's that little slump. So what would cause that? And I thought, "Well, if I had to write a straight mystery, and I couldn't play with anything else, I think I would get bored." 

So, I decided I would add my love of the supernatural and folklore and myth into our modern world. That's how Anita Blake's world was created, and I thought I won't get bored with this. If everything that goes bump in the night is real, and I have mystery and murder and all that cool stuff mixed together... If I can mix all the genres, I think I won't get bored. And you know what? Here I am - book 29 and I am never bored. I have the best time because I keep learning something new with every book. I've learned something new about my world, about my characters. The other thing I think for some long running series, especially mystery series - they try to keep the tone of every book the same. I thought, again, that would not interest me as a writer. One of the reasons I have such a big character growth. My character arcs for growth are unusual in how much characters can grow and change over the life of the series, and that again, helps me stay interested. If I've shoved my characters in a box and said, "No, this is your area. This is your box. Stay in your box." I think I would have been bored by now, but because I let them grow and change just like real people. My imaginary friends get to have a life too. I think that's one of the reasons I come to every book excited and learn new things, and that's really I think the secret.

Mindy: I agree. I think it is important, like you're saying... You said my imaginary friends have lives too. I love that. I have a book coming out next week. My main character, the narrator... I had a very distinct way that I wanted her to be, for her to bounce off of the other main character, and it was very imperative to the plot and the growth of both of them that they be the way that I wanted them to be in my head. And then I started writing, and it was Chapter 1. I started writing this character, and she was supposed to be just very type A. Really Good. Never does anything wrong. Always striving to be the best, and also actually be good. And I started writing her, and her internal monologue... She was pissed. She was angry. Her exterior was, "Yes. What can I do to help you? I'm here." And her interior was, "What am I getting out of this?" And I was just like, "Oh my God! No, you're not. What are you doing?" Okay, you're much more interesting now and I let her be that person. And it ended up changing the plot, and it changed so many things about the book. And it made it a better book.

Laurell: It does. Now, you have to be careful because if my characters come up with a better idea that actually is in line with them as people, then I will throw out a third of my plot because they are just better than I thought they were and the villain is not powerful enough. Or they think of a totally different way out of the situation that is more logical for them as their character, I will explore it. And most of the time, they're right. Every once in a while, it's a rabbit hole and it doesn't lead to wonderland. It leads more to like... That is just rabbit poop. We need to back 'er up and find the other exits. But most of the time, like you said, the characters know themselves. And once you create a character and you start writing them, the process of putting them on the page often changes them, sometimes in small ways and sometimes in big ways, but the process of writing is where you explore a character. Especially a new one. It's like a coffee date. You're sitting down across from them and going, "Okay, who are you?" Here's who I think you are, but once you start writing, sometimes they're not who you thought they were.

Mindy: And it can take you to great places. It can also derail you, as you said. But ultimately, if you're treating them like real people, you're just getting to know them better. And even if you might not allow them to go directly in the path that they were aiming for originally, you might find a nice little halfway between that is exactly the right place for both of you.

Laurell: And the people that are my magic friends that I've written for all these many years... People say, "well, how do you keep them straight? How do you keep what they look like and stuff?" And I go, "Well, how do you keep your friends straight?"

Mindy: Yeah.

Laurell: You just know what they look like. I will add one caveat. Height, for some reason. I don't know why. Height. Height and eye color. If it's a new character, whatever eye color they started with, it's a roll of the dice whether I change it the next book. And if you're tall in my books, you'll get taller. If you're short in my book, you'll get shorter. I don't know why but those are two things I have to watch out for.

Mindy: Well, this is why we have copy editors.

Laurell: They don't always catch it.

Mindy: Oh really?

Laurell: Really. That's why I've started policing it myself. Sometimes they catch it, and sometimes they don't. And it's just those two things. It's the eye color and the height. I think that's why I noticed it, because I think the copy editors catch everything else.

Mindy: I have trouble with linear time. That never works out well for me. I have come to the point where I will not say specific days, months, even in my books because I always mess it up. I give them a general, this is the season. Like it's summer, winter, spring, fall. Or school just started. Or it's summer break. But I will never use specific dates. I'll never say what day of the week it is. I typically am never going to say even what month it is, because I will mess it up.

Laurell: I'm usually good on months, but yes, I'm vague on days.

Mindy: My book that comes out next week is a murder mystery, and timelines are really freaking important in murder mysteries. I had a character... There was photographic evidence of her doing something and still being alive after a point where she was actually dead. And so it's like... The copy editor's like, "Hey, she was dead when this photo was taken of her hanging out of this party." And I'm like, "God damnit!"

Laurell: The one thing early in the series that nobody caught - my editor didn't catch it. Copy editor didn't catch it. I didn't catch it. Readers didn't catch it. My writer's group didn't catch it. Fans didn't catch it for years. It was years after that book came out before somebody caught the fact that in Circus of the Damned, Anita has a car that she drives. It gets wrecked. She's driving it the rest of the book. It happens.

Mindy: It sure does. The people may be very real, but the details can get foggy.

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Mindy: One of the things that you and I were talking about before I started recording that I think is an interesting thing to bring up for everyone else to be a part of the conversation. Your books do tend to have some spice to them. Like they're sex positive. They're fun to read. As I said before, I write YA. I have been getting hit with the censorship wave that is rolling through education and libraries right now. Sex is one of the biggest things that is a trigger. Violence usually is actually okay. It's really weird to me. The tiers of what is unacceptable. Language is kind of a medium. Violence usually gets a pass. And sex? No. Never ever. Don't even think about it. If you're under 18, you don't have genitals. I also will say, I do not put sex on the page because I worked in a high school for 14 years, and it just makes me personally feel a little bit icky.

Laurell: I have never had a character that is under the age of 18 have sex on paper on stage. So, I also have consent age as well. I've had one character that was legally of age but under 18. They had sex, but it's never shown. That is the one rule I have on sex. It's just an iffy subject. Under 18? I treat my books like if you're under 18, it won't be on stage sex in my books. It just won't. One of the interesting things about traveling internationally for events is that in America, people have trouble with the sexual content of the Anita Blake series. But when I traveled to Italy, the reporters there said, “Why did I wait so long for her to have sex?” Especially with Jean-Claude. She's not a modern woman because she waited so long. They had a problem with the violence. I traveled in France and Italy for that. They both had more trouble with the violence as readers than the sexual content. That didn't bother them. But in America, it's always the sex that bothers and not the violence. And it's a cultural difference. If you'd never travel outside of this country, you don't know that.

Mindy: I never know the temperature of the room. Whether it's because I write YA or if it's, like you're saying, this is just the way our country operates, and it sounds like sex, in the United States, is the thing that's going to get you possibly in trouble or ruffle feathers.

Laurell: I've actually never been censored. I've never been told I can't. I had one book where they wanted me to take out one scene, not because of sexual content, but because they just thought there was too much. I've only been told once that something was questioned on the polyamory. I was writing polyamory before non-monogamy was cool. And my answer to that was to write the book Jason, which was a small book in between the larger books. It's all poly. It's all poly. It is the only book I've ever written that's not a mystery. And since I am polyamorous, that was like saying, your sexual orientation is not okay.

Mindy: Yeah.

Laurell: And so I wrote Jason which is all about polyamory and sex and BDSM. It is all about that and how relationships work. And it was the number one best selling book in the country. So, you know, I'm good. I have never had anybody question me. I've never had anybody say no. I have had my editors twice come back and want a sex scene. Once upon a time when I started the series, my goal was to not have sex on-screen. Was to have every kiss and caress so good you wouldn't need the sex. Which was incredibly naïve of me. But when I finally realized that I had written violent crime scenes and serial killer books with plot lines with no compunction about the violence. But writing a sex scene between two people that have known each other for years and care about each other, that bothered me? It bothered me that it bothered me.

Mindy: Yup.

Laurell: And so I just said, "Okay, if I do not look away. If the camera does not look away from the violence, then I will not look away from the sex." Because the sex is a positive thing. The violence is not. It deserves its own camera, and that is why when Anita finally had sex, we had it on stage and we didn't look away. Positive sex with someone you care about deserves as much attention as violence and crime, and if it doesn't, then what did that say about me as a writer? As a person? Well, it said, I'm very American. I don't know why we are like this, but we are as a cultural thing. Violence is okay. Sex is not. And this attitude has regulated God to be the sex police. God is not the sex police. I do not know where we came up with this idea that sex is more important than anything else to regulate. It is a very American ideal.

So, book 10 is where the polyamory comes in, and I had people upset with me because Anita didn't just pick one. I researched it. I researched polyamory. I researched BDSM. I researched everything. I ended up being part of the community, but even before I was part of the communities, I did my research. And one of the things that is my big bug-a-boo is I'm reading somebody, and it's obvious they've done no research on alternate culture. Alternate culture of BDSM. Alternate ways of living. It always shows. And if you're part of that community, if that's your sexual orientation, and you always know that it rings false. Why does it matter as long as the person is in committed relationship with one or more people, as long as everybody is consenting adults, why does anybody care who they're sleeping with and what they're doing behind closed doors? Why does it matter? I don't understand that. That is a question I've actually asked people, and they never have a good answer. "Just because it's wrong" is not an answer.

Mindy: I think I, in a way, came into writing YA fairly naive as well in that I did not quite realize the level of antagonism that I would face. I don't have sex on the page, and I don't have sexual assault on the page either. But it happens. People get extremely uncomfortable with that very quickly. I don't understand that. I find that with sex in general, like you said earlier and I could not agree more, positive sex... Take out the teens 'cause like I said, I won't put it on the page. Writing a positive sex scene, people who are expressing their love to each other physically, how is this a bad thing? But you're okay with someone's head being completely sheared off? We can put that on the page and we can describe it and it's fine. As soon as we have people taking their clothes off, you've verged into a place where the camera should not go.

Laurell: Okay, so I had one-on-one sex between people who care about each other, and most people were okay with that. Added the poly, some people not. There is no sex in the first four books. There's adult situations, but no sex. I had people starting to complain by Book 5, and I had to go back and read Book 5 because there's no sex in Book 5 in my head. But there is sex, just the main character doesn't have sex. Jason... I won't give it away what happened, but let's just say it went horribly, horribly wrong. And it was a horrific scene. I've had a couple of men say that now I have ruined certain fantasies for them forever. I had some people have trouble just with that. I started asking people that were complaining about sexual content... I said, "Okay, where do you want it to stop?" And when they would say, "Well, it's just the middle books. It's just... There was so much in this book." But everyone has a different point where they wanna say, "No. We're done." I can't please everybody.

Mindy: It's so interesting what the cut-offs are for people as well. I will never forget. When I was in high school, I went to go see the movie Wild Things in the theater. Do you remember that movie?

Laurell: No.

Mindy: I can't remember her name. Charlie Sheen's ex-wife, Neve Campbell, and Kevin Bacon. Two teenage girls and two adult men. And there's sex with a teenage girl and an adult male who's her teacher. There's sex between the two girls. There's group sex. There's all these things going on. And it's on screen. Everybody's sitting there. Everybody's cool. Everybody is getting through the movie. I'm not hearing disgusted reactions. Everything's fine. Towards the end, there's full frontal male nudity, and people got up and left. That was what broke it for them. Kevin Bacon, like getting out of the shower. It wasn't even a sexual situation. He's just getting out of the shower. Everything else... Nobody had a problem. But show us a penis and they were just like, "Oh! Oh dear!" and they had to leave.

Laurell: Was their full-frontal female nudity?

Mindy: I don't believe there was.

Laurell: I don't know why they clutch their pearls then.

Mindy: I don't either. Really, guys? This is the thing? This is what's gonna make you go, "Oh, this is unacceptable"? Okay.

Laurell: I thought that we were doing a better job in our country educating people on sex. On their bodies. On comfortable-ness with themselves. Boy, was I wrong. Okay, you worked in a school system, and I know that kids can't always talk to you. But I am hearing a new generation of women are being told that they don't have to enjoy sex. That they have to do sex with their boyfriends. It's not about your pleasure. It's about their pleasure. If you look at media, what media shows us like on TVs and movies, it is so much easier to film a pretend intercourse scene and hide the bodies than it is to show foreplay without showing the rest of the body. I am told for most movies that if you do foreplay for a woman, even if it's not shown, even if the camera doesn't show body parts, you're more likely to get censored for showing foreplay on the woman than more male-oriented sex. We are structuring our entertainment. And what I've learned through writing the series is that people come to their entertainment to learn how to live their lives.

Mindy: Yes, they do.

Laurell: And I don't know, maybe this has always been true, but I certainly know that's what I'm hearing from other people. That reading my books was the first time they realized that women could enjoy sex. That reading my books was the first time they understood that it was supposed to be reciprocal. That it was mutual pleasure and not just about his pleasure. It's not older women telling me this. It is all ages telling me this.

Mindy: Yeah, unfortunately, I think that that has always been the case. The concept of the male being the one that's gonna benefit from the situation and the woman sometimes just taking one for the team. I read really widely and very freely when I was growing up, but there was definitely female pleasure in it. I mean, I was just fortunate. I live in a conservative area. I don't know why, but for whatever reason, I grew up aware that women enjoy this shit and that we should. I was just lucky in that way. I knew that that prism existed. I just wasn't seeing the world through it. In terms of today, what I see more than anything, and I don't work in the school system anymore, but I do move through it as a substitute... What I see more than anything is no one should be doing this period. Don't have sex, kids.

Laurell: Abstinence is what's being pressed, but by teaching abstinence, the teen pregnancy rate's going up. It's not just hurting women though. That's the interesting thing that I finally realized. In doing research for Zaniel Havelock... It's a male first person narrative. I ask questions of my husband and every male friend I had. Every boyfriend I had. Everyone. I'm polyamorous, so I have husband and boyfriends. I asked questions. I read books. There is a societal pressure and expectation that men just want sex, and when I say they just want sex, they just want intercourse. And that men don't enjoy giving or receiving foreplay. And I don't just mean blow jobs. Foreplay for men and foreplay for women. We are taught, still being taught, that men don't want it or need it. And we are still being taught that there's this idea of conquest so... Just get in there. Get out. Get your intercourse. Get your orgasm. Get out. The best sex for men and women is not that. That is not the best sex you're ever going to have in your life. I have dated men that love gentle touch... That love for you to run your fingers over their bodies. Men have a whole body. They're not just their genitals. Just like women do. I know that there are men that like just as much foreplay as the women. And I know that there are men out there that are also oriented, so they need a emotional connection to have good sex. Society doesn't give them the room to say that. Men aren't allowed to say that they need an emotional connection and that they don't want just a rut. Men are treated by other men as if that is a weakness and somehow makes them less manly, and that is so not true. The best sex is after you get to know each other. There is no such thing as the best sex you will ever have is a one-night stand. That is a fallacy. They've actually done studies on that. Best sex comes from partners that you see regularly, and you learn each other's bodies. 

The sad thing for me is I'm still hearing so many women that are having bad sex... That never have an orgasm. One of the interesting things is men are expected to be able to know how to ride this bike without ever having touched the bike before. The first time they get to have sex, they are terrified they're going to do this wrong. Women are conditioned not to talk about what they want and what their desires are. And so here you have the poor guy. He has never been alone with a women. Now they get to have sex, and he is supposed to know how to do all of this with no practice run. And let me just say this right now, please do not use porn as your practice run. Porn teaches you nothing that is usable in real life.

Mindy: That's the truth.

Laurell: Soft core porn... They're doing positions where you can't actually have sex in them. It just looks good on camera. Regular porn also must look good on camera. Good real sex does not look good on camera. No good habits here. Where else can the young people go? People who've never had sex... Where else can they go but porn? Where else in America are they left to go? If they can't talk to their parents or any adult in a real way and ask questions. If they're continuing to censor books so that good positive sex is not gonna be in books anymore, what do you leave but porn? And that's a such a bad place. It doesn't teach you good, good habits. It doesn't teach you things that work well. The sole situation of ignorance is not helpful to anybody. And people say that men talk about sex. Men don't talk about sex. Men do locker room talk about sex. Swinging from the chandeliers... That tells you nothing about real sex. You can't go to your friends and say, "the sex isn't working."

Mindy: I have a really good circle of female friends. We will have very frank conversations with each other, and one friend that has not had as many experiences as the other two of us. And she'll be like, "Okay, wait. How do you do this? How does that work?" More than once my roommate and I have been like, "Okay, come here." My roommate and I will just be on the floor and we'll be like, "it's like this." We will just try to show her how certain things are done or different positions or things like that. And we're laughing and it's funny and we're having a good time. But at the same time, it's so lovely. We're comfortable enough with each other where it's like we're putting ourselves, our own bodies in these positions, but we're also just like teaching her. This is how you do this thing, and I can't imagine a situation where men get to do that with each other.

Laurell: It's been my experience that women talk in more detail about sex than men, and if you have good enough friends, you can ask those kinds of questions. You know, I had a friend come to me and say that her new husband was really well-endowed, and it was hurting. She loves sex, but it was hurting. And I had to ask, "Well, is it a length alone?" I knew positions for length - to help with length. Sadly it was length and width. But she could come to me. She could ask me these questions, and we talked about it. We talked about some positioning. I gave her what advice I had, but you're right. Men are not gonna go to another man and say, "Well, how do I do this?" They're just not gonna do that.

Mindy: No.

Laurell: They're not gonna do that with each other. The best advice I have ever gotten talking to men for another man... Most realistic advice I've ever heard. If you know you're only gonna last three minutes, then you make sure that the hour before those three minutes or two hours before that three minutes is the best hour to two hours she's ever had. I thought that is the most realistic advice I have ever heard.

Mindy: I agree. I think the way that we look at sex in the United States has just robbed so many people of actually having a good time or enjoying another person or persons company.

Laurell: Yes.

Mindy: It just... It makes me very sad. And like I said before, I was raised in a fairly conservative family but also weirdly sex positive. My mom and dad absolutely love each other, and it's obvious. And my mother let me read whatever I wanted to read and there was never any censorship. And it was very helpful to me. As someone that is creating, as you are, art for this world, you also just have to be like, "Okay. Some people are gonna be okay with this element of it," like we said earlier, and some people are just gonna be like, "This is where I draw my line." And I'm like, "That's cool. Then don't read that."

Laurell: One of the things though that I have changed is I put in more detail because so many people don't know how anything works.

Mindy: Yep.

Laurell: It really kind of shocked me how many people don't know how things work. There's hope for us to talk about things in a manner that isn't hostile to each other. I love my country, and when I was raised, one of the things that I was taught is that you could talk about anything and just agree to disagree. I think that somewhere along the way, we've decided that on every topic we will have our opinion and not move from it, and we will not talk together. We will just talk at each other.

Mindy: That's the dividing line that we've all been running right up to and hitting our heads on for a while now. So with all of that in mind and with Smolder coming out here soon, why don't you let people know where they can find you online and where they can find the book.

Laurell: On Twitter, I am LKHamilton. On Instagram, I am LKH underscore official. I don't remember my Facebook. I really honestly to God don't. On TikTok, I'm also LKH underscore official.

Mindy:     Writer Writer Pants on Fire is produced by Mindy McGinnis. Music by Jack Korbel. Don't forget to check out the blog for additional interviews, writing advice and publication tips at Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com. If the blog or podcast have been helpful to you or if you just enjoy listening, please consider donating. Visit Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com and click “support the blog and podcast” in the sidebar.

Lynn Ng Quezon On The Value of Critique Partners and The Anxiety of Author School Visits

Mindy:   Welcome to Writer Writer Pants on Fire, where authors talk about things that never happened to people who don't exist. We also cover craft, the agent hunt, query trenches, publishing, industry, marketing and more. I'm your host, Mindy McGinnis. You can check out my books and social media at mindymcginnis dot com and make sure to visit the Writer Writer Pants on Fire blog for additional interviews, query critiques and more as well as full transcriptions of each podcast episode at WriterWriterPants on Fire.com. And don’t forget to check out the Writer, Writer, Pants on Fire Facebook page. Give me feedback, suggest topics you’d like to hear discussed, and let me know if there is someone you’d love to see as a guest.

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Mindy: We're here with Lynn Ng Quezon, author of Mattie and the Machine, which released in November of last year from Santa Monica Press. One of the things that is really interesting, and I'm sure that my audience is familiar with this by now, is that I started out my life attempting to become a serious writer on a messaging board called Agent Query Connect, which is now defunct. However, it was such a source of knowledge for me and also just comfort. And there were so many people there that I relied on, and I know that they also relied on the boards. And I've had many of them on the show, and you were one of them. So, if you could talk a little bit about what it was like for you as an emerging writer to have that as a resource and to have a community. And for this episode, I really wanna focus on community and support among writers, and also connectivity and networking.

Lynn: There are tons of script writers in LA. I was writing middle grade and young adults, and trying to find somebody who wrote that category was really difficult in person. So I went to the internet, and I actually cannot remember how I stumbled upon Agent Query Connect. I was doing a search. I think I saw on the boards a young adults middle grade group was starting up. So I basically just approached the group and I said, "Is it okay if I just sort of like, watch you guys?" You're doing exchanges online. You're swapping manuscripts. I wasn't sure if I was ready to jump in on that, because all of you guys, at least to me at the time, seemed like you knew what you were doing, and I learned so much from the group. I learned how to give and take feedback. Everybody is really terrific about it, and everybody brought different things to the table. But the thing is, is that we all wrote different genres - quite a bit of Sci-fi. I was writing historical. A couple of other people are writing fantasy. Basically how I learned how a healthy critique group functioned was off of this. I've always been grateful for that. More than half of the group at this point has been published. Which is really amazing, I think.

Mindy: Real quick, because I am confident many of our old AQC board members are present and listening to the episode, share your screen name, if you would, so that everyone recognizes you.

Lynn: Okay, my screen name is Sakura Eries, a modification of my fan fiction writer name. I remember you as BBC with the black cat avatar. It's a little bit funny calling you Mindy because I think of you as BBC.

Mindy: So many people still do. I personally identify an area of my life as BBC. Just for listeners that aren't familiar, my screen name at the time was big black cat 97. And everyone affectionately referred to me as BBC, and then I have Le Chat Noir as my avatar. Even now, I'll get emails every now and then from people that'll be like, "Hey, BBC. I was just wondering," and I'm like, "Oh, yeah!" And then I've actually had a couple of times moving through the publishing world, if AQC happens to come up, and I'll be like, "Oh yeah. I was a moderator there, and it was very important to me." And they'll be like, "Oh, what was your screen name?" And then I'll, "Oh, I was BBC." And they'll be like, "Wait!" I actually had a pretty major editor at a pretty large publishing house who, at the time, had just been an intern and was kinda lurking on the boards, that was like "wait a minute. That was you?" 

Going back to what you said about the proliferation of screenwriters where you were at the time and how that wasn't necessarily helpful to you - it is interesting to me. It is very specific, down to your age category and occasionally also the genre - although I can obviously swap manuscripts with my main critique partners at the beginning of my life as a writer who was also a critique partner, were RC Lewis, who writes strictly Sci-fi, and MarcyKate Connolly, who writes mostly fantasy, and I was writing post-apocalytpic dystopian that was very much realistic. There was no fantasy. There was no sci-fi. Yet, we were extremely efficient critique partners for each other. However, when it comes to age category, that I think you do need someone that is operating in the same arena as you because there are certain elements that are extremely important, and I can say as an editor, and I will have folks that are writing YA or even middle grade, and they will have a POV or chapters or even the entire book, is written from the perspective of an adult. No. No, that's not... That will not work. So, you do have to know the "oh no, no nos" are for that age category. And also just especially in the times that we're in now... Censorship being such a big issue. I just found out I've come under fire in another state here just this morning.

Lynn: Oh.

Mindy: Oh no, it's okay. It is to be expected, and I'm surprised it took this long.

Lynn: What's your state count?

Mindy: Missouri. Texas. Florida. Today, we added Pennsylvania. I'm sure that there are others that I just have not been brought to my attention yet. I've started to make it on to the lists. So it begins. I'm not saying that people should write in order to keep themselves safe from the censors, because also the censorship issue is something that we are talking about a lot inside of publishing. The average person, if they're not moving through the school system world at this point, probably don't know much about it. A new writer that isn't necessarily inside baseball might not be aware of some of the things that are going on. So, I do think it is important to be connecting with people inside of the age category that you're writing for, and if you can find someone within your genre as well, I think that's super important.

Lynn: I would definitely agree with that because when I moved out of LA and I moved up to the Bay Area, and I was connecting with the local writers here, my first group that I connected with... They were doing chapter book and picture book. I was the only YA person there. That was really awkward. They were very nice people, they were. Giving feedback was difficult 'cause I didn't read the age group. They didn't know how to give me feedback. That relationship lasted two months, but I need to find another group. I was fortunately able to find a local group that was able to join. We do mostly YA. They're great. What you said makes absolute sense because we all write different genres as well. One of them was doing horror. Another person was doing fantasy. Another person was doing magical realism, but we're all writing middle grade/YA. SO even though the genres are so different, we kinda know what the audience is. I don't have a teenager. I'm not a teacher. I don't have that experience. The people that are in my group, they have teenagers, one of them was a teacher, and another one... He works with children's theater. So we are able to exchange information that way, and at least I can sort of keep abreast what's going on. You probably, since you're still working at schools, you probably know a bit more than me.

Mindy: Well, one of the things I try and that I counsel other people that do write, young adult specifically, is not to worry too much about slang in particular or also whatever platform happens to be at the time. Because it'll date your book so seriously. So, for example, the very first novel that I ever wrote that was YA, I was in college. So we're talking late 90s. A major part of the plot unrolled over communications through AOL Instant Messenger. 10 years later - AIM doesn't even exist anymore, and nobody knows what it is. You know, Facebook was huge. Now it's not. Everybody was on Twitter. That's kind of fading. And the teenagers, they are on Instagram, and they are on TikTok. I learned very early on - don't be specific. Don't mention music. Don't mention a specific social media platform. Don't use specific slang. And traditional publishing is gonna take 18 months to two years for that book to make it into print anyway. And in two years, what you said in that book might be comical. That is a very specific facet of YA, and that is one of the reasons why, like you said, I do think it is important that we operate closely or within the arenas of people that are also writing something at least similar to what we are writing. Moving on then, I wanna talk about finding that group and the importance of the critique partner and tying that in with your own journey. So talk to us a little bit about Mattie and the Machine, and how you moved forward from AQC and into the realm of the published author.

Lynn: For Mattie and the Machine, I had queried at that point three manuscripts and they all got trunked. It's part of the journey of the writer, and you just sort of had to keep on going. What happened was I decided to try something completely different, and so I moved up to 19th century America. When I wrote my other manuscripts, it was because I really was in love of that ancient Greek era. But what happened was, was that I was flipping through this set of mini biographies about famous women, it's called Girls Who Rocked The World, and I happened across Margaret Knight's biography. I hadn't heard of her before. I fell in love with the character, but I knew nothing else about the era. And the thing about historical is that... And you know this, because you wrote a historical yourself, you have to get the set correct. I spent a lot of time trying to get the set correct. So, she was an inventor that was famous for two things. One is that she was a child inventor. And the second thing is that there was a lawsuit involving a machine she invented, but a man stole the design. And so she had to go and sue this guy in order to get the patent rights back. And so I saw that story and I was like, "Okay. I have to write the story." I went so far as to go to the National Archives on the other side of the country to get the lawsuit records. Dig them up. These things are like hand-written from 1870, and I transcribe them all. And then I wrote the whole thing out. I got the patent for the machine, and so I broke that all down. This is how this thing was built, how it functioned. 

The thing is, is that I have to re-mold this for a modern audience. There's things that I was trying to write on the page portraying her correctly as an inventor and about this whole lawsuit. Some of the texts I would lift directly from the deposition documents. This is what I put out in front of my group. And so what they really helped me to do, because I am an engineer and I have an engineer brain and I sort of look at things a certain way, they were able to sort of reel me back and go, "This part is okay, but you're writing a certain way and then you get to this point, and it's like you just jumped back two centuries." That's how my group really helped me. I spent two years researching it. Two years writing it, and I spent two years querying it. And to be quite honest, I didn't think it was gonna get picked up. When I was getting towards the end of the two years, I was like, "I'm gonna get up to 100 queries, and I'm gonna send out 100 of them. If I don't get anything after 100, then I'm just gonna end it." On Manuscript Wish List, that's where I found Santa Monica Press. They had an open call for submissions, and they were looking for young adult historical. I'll put it in and just see if they pick it up. And it got picked up. I was still sort of cautiously optimistic pretty much up until the ARCs got sent out.

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Mindy: With historical, we tend to go really deep in the weeds and we wanna explain why this is the way it is. And we want our research to get on to the page, and that doesn't necessarily make for interesting reading.

Lynn: I will agree on that. I went a bit in that direction, and I needed my critique group to reel me back. And actually there was another scene where she accomplishes this first big goal, and so now she can move forward and my critique was like, "That's it? She's not going to have a celebration? She need to have celebration." Everybody was saying it. So the thing about critique groups is like if one person says it, out of a group of five, it's kinda like up to you to decide if you wanna take it or not. But if everybody's telling you that, then you really have to pay attention. So there is actually like...

Mindy: Absolutely.

Lynn: ... half a chapter in Mattie and the Machine that was not part of the original. I was not intending to put in there, but because my critique group was basically screaming at me, "You need to put this in there!" I put it in there, and it made it a better book.

Mindy: You need those critique partners to tell you where you're doing too much and where you are not doing enough. You can't see it to yourself. Tell me a little bit about how you feel now, because you had a quite a long journey. It was a lot of work for you. I was working for 10 years to get an agent, and I know that you had a similar timeline and similar struggles to me in terms of moving from being an aspiring writer to being a published author. So, how does it affect your process now? Are you continuing to write? Do you feel a lift of pressure or do you feel more?

Lynn: So I feel a bit more pressure because Santa Monica Press, my editor has been awesome. I feel so much gratitude for them for picking my book out of the slush pile. I mentioned before, I'm not that great with social media. Trying to figure out how all this works. Promoting a book now is difficult 'cause I just got on to Instagram. I looked at TikTok, and I sort of went away screaming. I don't know that I should admit that, but it's like trying to figure out how to give Mattie the best chance out there. So, I have my first school visit scheduled for next month. That's both exciting and terrifying. At the time that you were launching, the whole thing was like blog tours, stuff like that. I don't... Do people even do blogs anymore?

Mindy: Not really.

Lynn: All the stuff that I learned before about the time that you and MarcyKate were debuting. You're my first batch of people that I knew that were actually moving on so I was like, "Oh, this is what they're doing. I should keep track of it." It took me 10 years. And now I finally caught up with you, and now the landscape's changed. So, I'm grateful for you having me on this podcast. I really appreciate that. But yeah, I'm still trying to figure out how that part of the business works. It doesn't really affect the writing part because I'm still writing. That part I feel like I know pretty well, and at the time that Mattie and the Machine got picked up, I was like 75% of the way through another manuscript which is a completely different genre. So I'm just chugging along on that. That is sort of like a comforting space, 'cause I've been in it for 10 years. I know that part. Being motivated to write is not that difficult. We'd exchange a couple of emails about school visits. Because you've worked in a school environment, maybe it's not quite as terrifying for you. I went to school in California in the Bay Area, and we never had authors visits at my school. I don't even have that to fall back on. I don't know what they're supposed to be like.

Mindy: Yeah, well. I mean, I can tell you... So on the social media front, I've said multiple times on this podcast. I'm gonna say it again. I don't think it sells books. It connects you to your readers, and it can help people aware of you as a human being and maybe aware of your book as well. But I don't think it matters, if I'm gonna be totally honest with you. I think it's a nice to have it because people will reach out to me. People that have read my books will send me a message on Instagram or they'll DM me, usually Instagram. I answer everybody. It's like I will absolutely have a conversation with anyone. So, that is how I use social media these days... Is more of connectivity. It's not gonna sell books. If you happen to go viral for whatever reason, and usually that's gonna be a TikTok, then good for you. But the truth is, I'm not even present on TikTok. I have an account. I've made three or four reels. I'm not gonna put myself into it. I don't care enough, and it shows if you don't care. I've absenteed myself from that platform. If other people wanna make TikToks about me, cool. That would be super helpful. Please do it.

But when it comes to school visits... Yeah, high school's hard. High school's hard when you're in it, and it's really hard to walk back as an adult. And if you have any trauma from high school, it will hit you in the face again. Working in a high school for 14 years was the most beneficial thing to my writing career. Understanding teens today. Being connected with them. How they think and feel and move through the world today, which is completely different from how I moved through the world in the 90s. But also, people are still people. Teenagers are still teenagers, and they wanna have fun. They wanna laugh. They don't wanna be condescended to, and they don't want to feel like you are imparting a lesson. They don't wanna feel like you are making a point and teaching them something. My most successful school visits are one where I just go in. I talk about my book, but usually in terms of... I'm not trying to sell them my book. I talk about whatever the book is about. With Heroine, I talk about where I got the idea for the book, and then I talk about my research a little bit. And I talk about the opioid epidemic. I just talk around it, and I get them interested in the idea 'cause they don't... They know when they're being marketed too. That's what I do. Man, I love doing it. I miss being with the kids. I miss being in front of the kids. I love interacting with them. So man, I love school visits. I'd do one every day. I know that they're scary, and I have the benefit of 14 years of being in front of them, being ready for their comebacks, and being ready... 'cause some of them are gonna give a shit and it's like... I got good, as a librarian and then as a sub, at fending them off and coming back at them in a way that is appropriate and also respectful towards them. But just like a little bit of back and forth, and then they're like, "Oh, okay. You're cool." I mean, it's a tight rope. It's a tight rope. Last thing, we just talked about social media. So I know that you are putting yourself out there so that listeners can find you and follow you there. Why don't you let people know where they can find you online and where they can find Mattie and the Machine.

Lynn: You can find me online at Instagram, ngquezon, N-G-Q-U-E-Z-O-N. My author website is at NgQuezon dot wordpress dot com. So that's N-G-Q-U-E-Z-O-N dot wordpress dot com. And if you go over there, you can find information about where to find the book, and also there's reader's resources. So stuff about Margaret Knight. I did all that research. So for anybody who is interested in geeking out about those particular details about 19th century women or Margaret Knight, the inventor... There's some drawings. Just in case somebody really wants to know have all these parts work. Dumped them into a Reader's Guide, and so that's something that you can also download from my website. And then in terms of where Mattie and the Machine is available, you can find it at Amazon, Barnes and Noble, IndieBound... Basically, if you wanna find all the other places, you can also look it up on my website.

Mindy:     Writer Writer Pants on Fire is produced by Mindy McGinnis. Music by Jack Korbel. Don't forget to check out the blog for additional interviews, writing advice and publication tips at Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com. If the blog or podcast have been helpful to you or if you just enjoy listening, please consider donating. Visit Writer Writer Pants on Fire dot com and click “support the blog and podcast” in the sidebar.