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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Winnemucca, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. How to make a book trailer

The Birth Of a Book Trailer

I knew I needed a book trailer to help promote my debut YA novel Winnemucca. First of all, I love movies. Heck, I live in Los Angeles. And, I worked in the entertainment industry. I knew the power of the trailer. Plus, how much fun would making my own trailer be?

But still, I didn’t know how to make one. Hmmm. I’d incorporated videos in my designs for years at E! Entertainment Television and at The Los Angeles Times. But they were provided to me by amazing teams of award winning videographers. And the photos I worked with were shot by Pulitzer Prize winning photographers. Who did I think I was trying to do this all on my own?

Well, that’s the best part. We aren’t on our own! Writers are some of the most generous people. And so I kept my eye open for trailers that I loved. Enter the wonderful writer Rebecca Rasmussen [@birdsisters] author of The Bird Sisterspublished by Crown/Random House. I was surprised to find out she made her own trailer. Rebecca was very generous with her support and advise. Thanks Rebecca!

So after a load of conversations I managed to conjure up a recipe for book trailers:

  • iMovie application.
  • A killer soundtrack.
  • stock videos.
  • stock photography.

and WaaaaLaaa! You have your book trailer.

A Recipe For Book Trailers

iMovie is a very easy application to work with. It’s drag and drop so no worries there. And it comes with every Mac.

A killer soundtrack is so important. I don’t mind book trailers where the author reads their work. There is something very pure about that. But, like I said, I love movies. Music that evokes your story is compelling and can draw a viewer into the trailer in a unique way. I used www.productiontrax.com. Most of the audio clips are very reasonable priced. [I splurged on this and purchased sound for $60 because I loved it and am a music junkie.]

Stock Videos. I’ve seen a lot of trailers that try to tell the story with static images and scrolling or rolling text. It’s a great effect. But, the medium is meant for video. And, if you don’t have any that you’ve shot yourself, stock video sites are great ways to add some punch to your trailer. Sites I like include istockphoto.com andpond5.com. Both have great selections and great ways to save multiple videos for your consideration so if you are busy, like who isn’t, you can come back later and make your final cut. Again, most videos are very reasonably priced, but watch it, some aren’t. And don’t worry if your video has a soundtrack with it. iMovie let’s you separate the audio channel out and you can use whatever audio you want with any video. My average purchase for a video was $15.

Stock Photography. I use the same sites I recommended above to find images for book covers and for book trailers. Again, stock photography is reasonably priced. But be sure you check prices.

As always, have a budget in mind and stick to it, mine was under $90. It’s really important to get the word out about your book, but what’s more important is how much fun you have doing it!

The Book Trailer

Winnemucca is a young-adult small-town fairy tale about a teenage girl awakening to her own intuition on an enchanted road trip. One lie will change Ginny’s life forever. The truth will will set her free.

Over To You

Did I miss anything? Do you have any tips or tricks from making your own book trailers? If you have anything to add to this article, or even just want to share your own book trailers, then please add it to the comments below…


1 Comments on How to make a book trailer, last added: 10/13/2014
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2. YA Storytellers : *blushes* or yeah I d-id….

embarass

This week for Fun Friday the YA Storytellers are dishing embarrassing moments. There are sooooo many to choose from for me. But the one that just cracks me up is the one that happened to me in Houston. I hadn’t flown very far, it was only a four hour flight. So I can’t blame this on jet leg or even exhaustion, I guess I could try and blame it on what I call travel haze. Overstimulation. Rushing. This thing and that thing on the mind. I was not quite where I needed to be CLEARLY.

See, I had to pee. Yeah. And so I did. Only, as I did, a very deep voice in the stall next to me said in a southern, very gentlemanly accent, “Ma’am, I believe you are in the wrong bathroom.” He must have seen my pink painted toes. You know those moments, the ones where you’re like, REALLY? It sort of hits me between the eyes and the center of my stomach at the same time and I alternate between wanting to laugh and disappear. I didn’t laugh. I remember that because I was so gobsmacked, as a good friend would say–it actually is the perfect word to describe how it felt for me. So I sort of doubled over on my half-naked self and swore silently. Then he added, “I’ll make sure no one else comes in while you are in here.” And my rescuer was a very wonderful man who asked me if I was okay. And I thought I was, but maybe deep down I really wasn’t. Anyway, looking into his deep dark eyes and seeing his white smile made whiter by his chestnut skin, I felt certain he was an angel watching out for me. A perfect stranger’s kindness is usually what meets my embarrassment every time. I guess fast friends are formed in the intimacy of being vulnerable, being human. And for every time I’ve wanted to disappear when I’ve been embarrassed, I’ve been given a measure of magic too.

Ginny, in Winnemucca, a small-town fairy tale has an embarrassing moment when she realizes she’s falling for the local axe-murderer…at least that’s what her best friend Lizzy calls him. Of course this happens the day she’s planning to breakup with Bobby, her fiáncee. Here’s the excerpt:

Clyde placed his murdering hand on the doorknob and took his

eyes off me for the very first time. He walked out of the stock room

but something floated in the air behind him and whatever-it-was

caught in the door Lizzy held open. I bent down, and freed the

paper, but it was just an empty toilet paper roll. I tossed it into the

garbage but when it landed on a pile of folded Pampers packing

boxes, I saw what I hadn’t seen when I held it in my hand––ribbons

of blue words.

“What’s that?” Lizzy said pawing my hand.

“Nothing.” I rolled it over in my fingers trying to make sense of the

scribbling. But, it wasn’t scribbling. It was, poetry. Even had a title,

No one loves you like me. Dated the day before.

There’s a circle, a spiral I walk

with dear Ginny

and a wish we’d never part

as we lift over our barbed wire sea

Ginny. Me. Clyde signed his name so hard it indented the

“Let me see,” Lizzy said. But I stuffed the poem in my apron like a

used Kleenex. Like it wasn’t the most enchanting moment of my

life––that a man I’d never spoken to wrote a love poem about me.

And for the first time I didn’t believe the rumors about Clyde.

Lizzy unloaded another box of shampoo and I peeked at the next

line:

The Devil’s rope around my heart

I wanted to know more about Clyde as desperately as I wanted

nothing to do with Bobby.

“Now, you girls get back to work,” Charlie said, all fake mad, his

forehead a sea of wrinkles, his tuffty eyebrows formed a V like a

Muppet. Tie Guy sighed, scribbling on his clipboard again.

“Anna knows where you are. Bobby’ll be here any minute,”

Lizzy whispered in my ear.

I rolled Clyde’s poetry in my fingers, trying to read every word.

“Let me tell Bobby.” Lizzy eyed the poem.

I shook my head, dropped the poem into my apron pocket and

grabbed Lizzy by the hand so we could catch up to Clyde. My cell

vibrated again. I searched up and down every aisle but Clyde had

vanished. The clocks on the new majestic shelves in aisle nine

weren’t running. I stared at them anyway.

“Why are you just standing there?” Lizzy asked.

Clyde walked past empty picture frames and table lamps.

He met me at the frozen clocks and leaned his mop against the

majestic shelves.

My cell vibrated again, and all I wanted to do was breathe in

Clyde’s big-sky, blue-eyed stare. My stomach sank knowing why.

My heart had Devil’s rope around it too. I held tight to Espy’s

“Lizzy Fairchild, to the register,” Charlie announced over the

Lizzy said, “Keep away from my best friend, Convict.” She threw

Clyde an axe-murdering gaze on her walk down the aisle. She

was a master at axe-murdering gazes.

I’d never really seen Clyde before. And right then he wasn’t just

one of the people on the edges of my life anymore, he was front

and center.

“Straddling the fence is the same as straddling the middle of the

road,” Clyde said, like he knew the ripening would seal our fates.

Like he’d been with me when my sleep went thin and I’d straddle

the open road. And there, in aisle nine, I fell for Clyde. It was

wrong. It was lousy timing. But it was real. My heart jack-hammered

and more than anything I wish I had the power to freeze time.

Thanks for stopping by. If you feel like sharing one of your embarrassing moments, feel free to comment and we can have a laugh together. Check out all the fun posts from the other YA Storytellers here. Have a wonderful weekend! *waves* from Indonesia.

 

Clyde placed his murdering hand on the doorknob and took his

eyes


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3. Road Trip Giveaway

Sunset winnemucca nevada

Image via Wikipedia

What’s your best road trip story?

I’m doing a giveaway to celebrate Winnemucca’s release! Swing by any of these blogs to leave your answer and enter to win one of 5 Kindle copies of Winnemucca or a $15 Amazon Gift Certificate!

Jagged Edge
The Wormhole
Book Lover & Procrastinator
Aobibliophile
Supernatural Bookworm
Reality Bites
My Neurotic Book Affair
Phantom Paragrapher


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4. Tuesday trip to Winnemucca and a fictional birthday

So I got curious last week. In between bouts of insomnia and non-stop...OOO! I got to write this downs. I can't really explain what happens when a book is released but there's this weird energy. All of sudden there are so many more things to do than just write. [Which is hard enough to find time to do anyway]. Now there are guest posts and keeping up with emails and requests for interviews, etc. It's all really great. But I guess that part of my brain had never been used before and it didn't really need a lot of sleep. I'm better now. Sleeping well and it's sort of like old times. Except I'm having less time to write.

Anyway, in this crazy frenzy of activity I got to wondering...when did I write the word Winnemucca down the very first time? When exactly did Ginny and her story first show up? I keep LOADS of journals. And with all the moving we've done over the past few years, I made sure to keep them with me and take them everywhere. Lug them everywhere. Joe has been a saint and doesn't say a word when we need to schlep a gazillion boxes of journals with us.

So I pulled out all my journals from 2005/2006 and started reading. And I found it. 10/4/05 was Ginny's and Winnemucca's birthday. I had just returned from Romania that September and had just started taking a writing class with the wonderful Val Hobbs and that's when Winnemucca and Ginny found me. I'm glad I know her birthday. I'm glad I have a record of it. It's the very first time I can turn to a page in one of my gazillion notebooks and point to the first day I had an idea and it turned into a novel.



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5. How To Buy/Read Ebooks Without A Kindle

A question my Kindle-less friends ask is: "If I don't have a Kindle, how can I read your ebook?" Here are the links that readers have shared with me that have enabled them to buy and read Winnemucca. When I found out one of my friends was reading my book on an android, I was like...what's an android? LOL! Now I know!

For the Mac
For the iPhone
For ipad
For google android
Blackberry
PC

Happy reading!



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6. Drinking From A Cold Spring With Friends






Last Saturday night Joe and I went down to Nepenthe to celebrate the book release. At the end of the book, along with a host of other folks, I acknowledge Nepenthe, and a few other people and places in Big Sur. The people and places that helped me write to The End. Without them, there wouldn't have been a Winnemucca. And so, here's the view from the back patio of Nepenthe at sunset. Some nights, there is a fog river than travels down the Pacific. When I lived in the wine barrel I took a video of it. [I'm the world's shakiest videographer, but it does stabilize pretty quick]





In the background you can hear Tom Petty singing "The Waiting" It really is the hardest part. Especially when you are trying to write to The End. Do you have any "writing to The End" stories?

When we first arrived at Nepenthe there were two belly dancers on the packed front patio. Their tangerine and golden scarves even more vibrant against the twilight sky. Later a band would play. We said Hi to friends we hadn't seen since we moved to town. Erin was out front greeting guests. She is an amazing painter and writer. You might want to check out her book about the creative process called Drinking From A Cold Spring, a little book of hope. Anyway, she congratulated me on the book and said she had a story about Winnemucca. People who've been to Winnemucca usually tell some great stories. Do you have one?



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7. Squuuueee! Book Release Day:D

I'm so excited to share my book release day with you! Winnemucca hit Amazon.com. You guys have been so awesome over the years. I started this blog when I started writing the very first versions of Winnemucca. Almost six years ago. Do you remember the road trip we took there?

Come and join in the twitterparty #Winnemucca. There's fun facts about the story. And giveaways. Right now I'm getting road trip tweets. The most exotic has been a road trip to Malta! Wow. Tons of stories about that, huh? A random road trip tweet wins a free Winnemucca ebook + $15 Amazon gift certificate:) But tweet fast. This giveaway is up at high noon [PST]...with more giveaways all day:)

Thanks again for celebrating with me! Couldn't have done it without you! *hugs*



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8. [Almost] Wordless Thursday & My First Review

Click here to check out my first review. Tomorrow is release day!







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9. Three days to Winnemucca: Fire and Teaser Tuesday

The Fire

So I'm at home just before a late dinner last night, typing away, when my hubby returns from working out and says, all out of breath, there's a fire very close to us. He called 911 when he reached the scene on his drive home and got out to knock on doors and warn people. I'm like "Do we need to pack up and get out of here?" He's like, IDK. We hop in the car and drive the windy road down from our house to see what's what and stop when firetrucks block our path. It's smokier now. And scarier. We can't see flames and we are so incredibly happy to see firetrucks. They were there late into the night and are here today traveling up and down the road, keeping watch. Where we live there are watchtowers for wildfires. I can see one now as I type pearched on the peaks of the Ventana Wilderness. We've lived through some horrible fires. Here are some photos. I even blogged a little bit for latimes.com for the Basin-Complex fire in Big Sur. It's amazing how smoke can bring it all back. We were very lucky last night because the typical on-shore winds we get here we not blowing. All was still. I shudder to think what would have happened if they weren't. So I guess it shouldn't surprise that Ginny gets caught up in a wildfire on her way to Winnemuccca.


The Teaser:

The prologue of Winnemucca:

PROLOGUE: The Ripening

The truth of how the music and I came into the world may never be known. Shaped in blood, and over vast journeys, conquerors passed the instrument to the conquered as easily as they all had a hand in fashioning its name. Sehtar. Citar. Kithara. Chitarra. Guiterne. Guiterre. Guittarre. Guitarra. Guitar. Named by the world, it can bubble up the world inside. A person’s fears and dreams. Alegría. And so it found me, one in an ancient line.

Some say the music took its name from the honored virgin, María H [mah-ree-ah AH-chay]. Others say it was named during the rule of the French Emperor of Mexico and comes from the French word for marriage. Scholars believe the music was named after the kind of wood used to make the platform where the performers danced to the music. From the very start, it was music to be danced.
Those closest to me say my road blood ripened in spite of what they thought was my nature. Others insist the ripening was some sort of tonic. But there was only one reason why the ripening visited me. And what surprised me most about the whole deal was how far I’d go.

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10. Four days to Winnemucca: Lydia Mendoza

Although Winnemucca is a contemporary young-adult paranormal novel, the history of the guitar and mariachi music flavors Winnemucca, and so does the spirit of Lydia Mendoza. Lydia was a Mexican-American music pioneer. The first Mexican-American woman to record her music in 1928 at the age of 14. She could be found playing with her family in, among other locations, bull fighting rings. Her family fled The Revolution in Mexico for south Texas. Lydia and her family followed the migrant trail, playing their music. Her beauty and talent quickly made her a star and she would record with The Blue Bird Record Company. Mal hombre [bad man] was her signature song. She was called La Alondra de la Frontera [The Lark of the Border]. She stood alone on stage with only her guitar for accompaniment. "Cuando yo canto esa canción, parece que yo vivo en ese momento." [When I sing, I live that song.] I brought Lydia's spirit into several characters in Winnemucca and was inspired by her story, so I thought I'd share it with you.

She was awarded The National Medal of Arts in 1999.





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11. Six Days To WINNEMUCCA: Cover Reveal



The story behind the cover:

My husband took the photo of Highway 33, just outside of Avenal State Prison. That's the prison in the distance on the right where you can just make out the razor wire, called Devil's Rope in the story. This is where WINNEMUCCA begins, set in Avenal, CA my hubby's hometown. We meet a seventeen-year-old girl named Ginny walking the godforsaken road.

The title is made in a whimsical font to reflect her enchanted road trip. There is a little bit of barbed wire underlining the title that's a metaphor for her journey.

I designed and created the cover. I hope you like it and wanted to share a little bit of the background on the image with you. If you would like to help spread the word about WINNEMUCCA you can like me on Facebook. I sure would appreciate it.

I'd love to hear the story behind your covers. The process you went through. Your journey finding the right one, the right artist. If you have an artist you'd like to recommend, please let me know and I'll pass his or her name along. Lots of writers I know are looking for cover artists.

There's a crow's next in some trees behind our property and they just drive Oso crazy! He woke up on a tear this morning trying to rid the world of crows!




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12. Pedicures & Popsicles Contest!

Because Ginny is possibly the fictional character most in need of a pedicure [she thinks with her feet] and because popsicles play a part in WINNEMUCCA too, I'm giving away 2 PEDICURES and a handful of POPSICLE prizes!

HOW TO ENTER:

Post a blurb here as a comment or here [if you want some privacy] about a time you HAD to think on your FEET! The contest is open until July 14th! Winners will be announced here and on my website July 15, the day WINNEMUCCA hits Kindle.

HOW TO DOUBLE YOUR ENTRY:

Include a link to this contest on your blog, twitter or website! Include the link with your blurb.

HOW TO TRIPLE YOUR ENTRY:

Name a character in young adult fiction that needs a pedicure worse than Ginny! Include the name of the character with your blurb.

GOOD LUCK! Winners will be determined by random number generation. And thanks for helping to celebrate Ginny's enchanted road trip to her true self!


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13. The road to publication diary: how to make your own book trailer



One mistake changes Ginny forever.
One answer sets her free.
Once upon a time, Ginny's road blood ripened, the day she got wise to love.

I knew I needed a book trailer to help promote my debut novel Winnemucca, a ya coming of age small-town fairy tale, which hits Kindle in mid-July. First of all, I love movies. Heck, I lived in Los Angeles for twenty-four years. And, I worked in the entertainment industry. I know the power of the trailer. Plus, how much fun would that be?

But still, I didn't know how to make one. Hmmm. I'd incorporated videos in my designs for years at E! Entertainment Television and at The Los Angeles Times. But they were provided to me by amazing teams of award winning videographers. And the photos I worked with were shot by Pulitzer Prize winning photographers. Who did I think I was trying to do this all on my own?

Well, that's the best part:) We aren't on our own! Writers are some of the most generous people. And so I kept my eye open for trailers that I loved. Enter the wonderful writer Rebecca Rasmussen [@birdsisters] author of The Bird Sisters published by Crown/Random House. I was surprised to find out she made her own trailer. I don't know why I was surprised. I just thought big houses had trailer production teams or something. Anyway, Rebecca was very generous with her support and advise. Thanks Rebecca!

So here's the recipe for a book trailer:

iMovie application
A killer soundtrack
stock videos
stock photography

and WaaaaLaaa! You have your book trailer.

iMovie is a very easy application to work with. It's drag and drop so no worries there.

A killer soundtrack is so important. I don't mind book trailers where the author reads their work. There is something very pure about that. But, like I said, I love movies. Music that evokes your story is compelling and can draw a viewer into the trailer in a unique way. I used www.productiontrax.com. Most of the audio clips are very reasonable priced. [I splurged on this and purchased sound for $60 because I loved it and am a music junkie.]

Stock Videos. I've seen a lot of trailers on the web that have static images and scrolling or rolling text. It's a great effect. But, the medium is meant for video. And, if you don't have any that you've shot yourself, stock video sites are great ways to add some punch to your trailer. Sites I like include istockphoto.com and pond5.com. Both have great selections and great ways to save multiple videos for your consideration so if you are busy, like who isn't, you can come back later and make your final cut. Again, most videos are very reasonably priced, but watch it, some aren't. And don't worry if your video has a soundtrack with it. iMovie let's you separate the audio channel out and you can use whatever audio you want with any video. My average purchase for a video was $20]

Stock Photography. I use the same sites I recommended above to find images for book covers and for book trailers. Again, stock photography is reasonable priced. But be sure you check prices.

As always, have a budget in mind and stick to it, mine was under $100. It's really important to get the word out about your book, but what's more important is how much fun you have doing it! If you do like the book trailer and found any of this information helpful, would you be a pal and help promote Winnemucca by commenting here http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qa9n1KIpaWw

Got a book trailer story? Post it and your book trailer here.

Tomorrow I talk about the fun of promotion.

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14. Lucky

I met with a local marketing guru last week and Patricia and I had a wonderful brainstorm session on how to market my novel. She was full of wonderful down-to-earth advice that I'm working on and considering. She was very wise too. And at the end of our conversation she mentioned the four aspects of luck and I wanted to share them with you here because they moved me deeply.

Expect to be lucky

See the good luck in the bad

Follow your gut

Have the ability to take advantage of unexpected opportunities

You know when you are in a normal conversation with someone and it takes a turn? You gain a clarity that wasn't there before. That's what happened to me when Patricia spoke about luck. Following your gut is at the heart of my novel. And I never really associated that one thing with luck. And then it hit me. That when we follow our gut, or listen to our little voice inside, or listen to our own intuition, or whatever a person likes to call it––when we do that one thing, new horizons open and a new awareness kicks in and I guess a person can call it luck when they see opportunities they never saw before, or live a more authentic life, or stand up for wants and desires, let them grow and evolve.

And why is our own voice so hard to hear?


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15. Thursday yarn



Graphitints on board
2.5 x 3.5
on ebay

Today was weird. It was so gloomy and cold. And I had to get my dryer fixed. I hope you never have to see the gunk that clogs your dryer vent when it isn't working right. Its almost as bad as the gunk they flush out of a clogged drain. Not quite, but it isn't pretty.

I managed to get this done in between that and mom duties and cat duties and bill paying duties and other work. How on earth do people actually do this 'daily painting' thing every day for years? It isn't easy. My hat's off to you all.

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