Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.
May the sparkle and joy of the season inspire us in positive and creative ventures.
Happy writing!
Welcome to my blog. This blog is all about writing tips for writers and teachers of writing. Twice monthly, I will address one aspect of writing. If you would like to know more about me or my books, check out my website at www.nancykellyallen.com
May the sparkle and joy of the season inspire us in positive and creative ventures.
Happy writing!
BUGS ON THE JOB will be available in January and at that time, I’ll have a book signing at the Read Spotted Newt Bookstore in Hazard. The book signing date will be announced soon. If you are local and can’t attend the book signing, contact Mandi at readspottednewt@gmail.com and she will reserve a book for you.
Those who are not local can preorder on the
website www.thelittlefig.com
on this page https://thelittlefig.com/.../bugs-on-the-job-coming-soon
The book will be available beginning January 1st at www.thelittlefig.com and will be available through the distributor APG Sales and Distribution in Nashville beginning February 1st.
Sweat and tears morph into chills and thrills as writers meet fans of their literary “babies.” The publication date is approaching quickly, and I’m ready.
Writing tips:
If you’re writing a picture book or a short story, keep
the number of characters small. BUG ON THE JOB has two characters per page, and
occasionally a third character, a flower, pops up.
Dialog breathes life into the characters. Allow your
words to show a character's personality.
Add humor. Every reader loves it.
Add conflict. The flower gives power to conflict in
this book.
Nancy Kelly Allen has written 51 children’s
books and a cookbook, SPIRIT OF KENTUCKY. Check out her blog at www.nancykellyallen.com
BUGS ON THE JOB, Nancy’s latest
picture book will be available in January 2022.
Check out her blog at www.nancykellyallen.com
bird finding my wings. This was a day of sharing on so many levels.
Talking with other authors gave me the chance to learn what
they’d been writing and discuss my upcoming books. Forging professional
relationships with authors is instrumental in developing a career. Fun, too. Viewing
their extensive collection of books juiced up my creative flow. Now I’m ready
to tackle my next manuscript with vigor. How’s that for a win-win!
I met friends I hadn’t seen in a couple of years, longer
for some, and filled the time chatting, laughing, reminiscing. How’s that for a
treat!
Making new friends and meeting fans is another opportunity
offered by a book fair. We instantly connect through a common bond: the love of
books. How’s that for a slice of happiness!
Here’s a win-win writing treat that’ll make your words
happy.
Each student will write one
“What if” question on a strip of paper.
Examples: What if my cat
could talk? What if people could read my mind?
Students will fold each
question and place it in a bowl.
Each student picks a question out of the hat and writes about the topic.
Note: I’m using the
word “student” loosely in this context. Students of writing come in all age
groups. This activity works equally well in a writer’s group.
Nancy Kelly Allen has
written 50 children’s books and a cookbook, SPIRIT OF KENTUCKY. Check out her
blog at www.nancykellyallen.com
BUGS ON THE JOB, Nancy’s latest picture book will be available in
January 2022.
held on November 6th at Joseph-Beth Booksellers in Lexington. I’ll be signing
copies of five of my books, so if you attend, stop by and we’ll chat.
I’m
looking forward to meeting lots of people who love to read. Another treat is
meeting authors and renewing friendships with authors I’ve met at events over
the years.
Since
this blog is all about writing tips, here are five I highly recommend:
1. Read
books. Readers make good writers.
2. Write
as often as possible. Your writing “muscle” needs to be exercised on a regular
basis to get and stay in shape.
3. Let
others read your work and give you feedback on what works and what does not.
4. Revise.
The first draft is never our best work.
5. Play
with words. Have fun with them. If you don’t enjoy writing them, the reader
won’t enjoy reading them.
A fun exercise for your writing “muscle.”
Write a page or two of a comic book/graphic novel. Draw the
pictures first; then add the speech bubbles. On a separate paper, write the
dialog that goes in the bubbles. Read it aloud. Think about ways you can revise
it to make it sound better for the reader. After you finish revising, add
dialog to the bubbles.
Nancy Kelly Allen has written 50 children’s
books and a cookbook, SPIRIT OF KENTUCKY. Check out her blog at www.nancykellyallen.com
Achoo!
More fun to say it than to sneeze it, right? Sound words are downright fun to
read aloud to and with a young child or a group of young children. They love to
join in and become a part of the activity.
Sound
words have a name, and it’s a mouthful. Onomatopoeia. It simply means a word the imitates its sound. Clink.
Honk. Jingle. You can use this figurative language to pizzaz, pop, and
sizzle writing.
Onomatopoeia makes writing more descriptive and
memorable because we can easily imagine the sound and picture the scene.
Writers use the sense of sight more than the
other senses. Visual clues help the reader imagine the scene, but other senses
add to the overall picture. Sound words are fun to create, too. How would a
drop of water hitting a pond sound? Maybe, plop. Plink. Plip. How
would it sound hitting a rock? Pa-plip. Ka-plop. Dopp.
Have
fun writing a story or poem using sound words. Listed below are some ideas to
boost your imagination.
Create zoo music: roar,
grrrrrrrrr, screech...
Night sounds: whooooo,
chirp, hiss…
Parade: boom, oompa,
toot, beep-beep, clack, clang…
Animal: arf, baa,
moooooo, squawk, flap, tap-tap-tap…
Nancy Kelly Allen has written 50 children’s
books and a cookbook, SPIRIT OF KENTUCKY. Check out her blog at www.nancykellyallen.com
I’m baaaaaack with more writing tips.
The pandemic slammed the doors on school classrooms
across the country, so I temporarily closed my blog thinking that I would post
again when schools reopened, which meant soon. Wrong! Eighteen months later, this
blog is resurfacing.
A lot happens in one-and-a-half years, especially if
cooped up inside with nowhere to go. As always, I turned to writing, my
personal outlet for all things sweet and bitter. Not associating with friends
was bitter. Fear of a virus we can’t see, hear, or touch was bitter. The loss
of a “normal” lifestyle was bitter. The silver lining of the dark, threatening
cloud was more time to kick up my heels—sweet. More time to read—sweeter. More
time to write—sweetest.
More time to write gave me the incentive to revise a mystery
novel I’d drafted years ago. Month after month, I pounded the keyboard and
finished that rascal. Sweet! I’ve been visiting classrooms, virtually. Sweet! I’ve
kept up with friends and family via text and phone. Sweet!
During this time, an editor asked me to write a
picture book based on an illustration of a spooky old house. So, I accepted the
challenge and enjoyed playing with words. Ooooo. Strange characters. Zap!
Strange actions. Boom! Strange sounds. A picture book is forthcoming.
The publication of my 50th book, COWBOY
JESSE, was another speck of silver lining during this pandemic, a speck I will always
cherish.
Let’s have fun with another silver lining often used
in writing—The Rule of Three. Play this hunt-and-find activity by identifying examples
of the “Rule of Three” in this blog. (Hint: There are several.)
Rule of three:
using a word or phrase three times for emphasis.
In my next blog, the talented author, Sandi Underwood,
will visit with news of her latest book, ON A SCALE OF ONE TO TEN, a
middle-grade novel.
Nancy Kelly Allen has written 50 children’s
books and a cookbook, SPIRIT OF KENTUCKY. Check out her blog at www.nancykellyallen.com