Sort Blog Posts

Sort Posts by:

  • in
    from   

Suggest a Blog

Enter a Blog's Feed URL below and click Submit:

Most Commented Posts

In the past 7 days

Recent Comments

Recently Viewed

MyJacketFlap Blogs

  • Login or Register for free to create your own customized page of blog posts from your favorite blogs. You can also add blogs by clicking the "Add to MyJacketFlap" links next to the blog name in each post.

Blog Posts by Tag

In the past 30 days

Blog Posts by Date

Click days in this calendar to see posts by day or month
new posts in all blogs
Viewing Blog: Angie Smibert, Most Recent at Top
Results 1 - 24 of 24
Visit This Blog | Login to Add to MyJacketFlap
science fiction - fantasy - young adult
Statistics for Angie Smibert

Number of Readers that added this blog to their MyJacketFlap:
1. Pardon the dust…

I just got a new theme, and I’m still working out the kinks.

Share/Bookmark

2 Comments on Pardon the dust…, last added: 8/6/2010
Display Comments Add a Comment
2. New Workshop for Young Writers

Fellow Elevensies Kathy McCullough, Shawn Goodman, and Randy Russell have put together a pretty cool site for young writers called the Young Writers Notebook. They’re still in the beta testing stage–with a planned official launch in September. But, if you’re a teen writer (or know of one) who’d like to help them test what works and what doesn’t, hop on over to the Notebook site.

Share/Bookmark

2 Comments on New Workshop for Young Writers, last added: 7/31/2010
Display Comments Add a Comment
3. Book Scout Interview

Today the delightful Kelsey Jones is featuring an interview with me on her blog, The Book Scout.

Share/Bookmark

0 Comments on Book Scout Interview as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
4. Not the cruelest month (I hope)

Marshall Cavendish had it’s launch / marketing meeting for my book earlier this week. And we have a pub date! Or at least a month. MEMENTO NORA will be coming out in April 2011.

While I have your attention, I put this trailer together a few months ago. What do you think?

Share/Bookmark

1 Comments on Not the cruelest month (I hope), last added: 7/15/2010
Display Comments Add a Comment
5. How do you visualize your novel?

I’m not normally an artsy-craftsy girl, and I can’t really draw. But, I have hit upon a crafty way that helps me visualize the characters and elements of my novel(s).

I have a notebook for each book.  (A sturdy black notebook one with gridlines and color-coded sections.  These notebooks remind me of the engineering lab books at KSC. ) In each book, I use a combination of images from magazines, the web, or stock photo places, sketches, and notes to cobble together my vision for that book.

charactersbdv

Winters gardenCrab Sculpture



For characters, I usually end up with a collage. Seldom do you find your vision of a character right there in Wired or Entertainment Weekly. So I may take the general looks of one image and combine it with the attitude of another. Since MEMENTO NORA has so many visual (and a few scientific) elements, I created pages for different settings and the weird and wonderful stuff therein. Share/Bookmark

5 Comments on How do you visualize your novel?, last added: 7/7/2010
Display Comments Add a Comment
6. Keeping track of your characters

The events of MEMENTO NORA (and my current WIP) span just a few weeks, and the three points of view overlap each other. It’s a lot to keep straight in my head. I’d find myself at the end of one draft with too many Saturdays in the week or having my characters in too many places at one time. So, I decided to track my characters on a calendar. I used the simple Microsoft Works Calendar. On the monthly view, I put the general plot point–who goes where and when–type of information. On the daily view, I put chapter and POV information.

Calendar for Memento Nora characters



It was a life-saver during the revision process. My editor did her own time line, and I could compare hers against mine to see who was right. It wasn’t always me, though. Usually, that was because I changed something in the text, but didn’t update the calendar.Share/Bookmark

4 Comments on Keeping track of your characters, last added: 6/29/2010
Display Comments Add a Comment
7. League Scavenger Hunt – Thursday’s Clue

We’re having our first scavenger hunt at the League of Extraordinary Writers. Can you guess the book title? Here’s today’s clue:

Thursday's Clue

DO NOT put your guess in the comments section here or at the League. GO HERE to enter the title of the book. Remember, it’s the first book in the series.

Need another hint?



If you can’t see the song and title above, check it out here.Share/Bookmark

4 Comments on League Scavenger Hunt – Thursday’s Clue, last added: 6/20/2010
Display Comments Add a Comment
8. Spreading the Meme: Women in Science Fiction

Sandra McDonald started this meme on her blog (I think), and I picked it up from Mary Robinette Cowall’s blog. Sandra and Diane Comet has put together a periodic table of women writers in science fiction:



My favorite part is the Connie Willis element. If you don’t get it, read “And even the Queen.”

Here’s the meme part.

Bold the women by whom you own books
Italicize those by whom you’ve read something of (short stories count)
*Star those you don’t recognize

  • Andre Norton
  • C. L. Moore
  • Evangeline Walton*
  • Leigh Brackett
  • Judith Merril
  • Joanna Russ
  • Margaret St. Clair*
  • Katherine MacLean*
  • Carol Emshwiller
  • Marion Zimmer Bradley
  • Zenna Henderson*
  • Madeline L’Engle
  • Angela Carter*
  • Ursula LeGuin
  • Anne McCaffrey
  • Diana Wynne Jones*
  • Kit Reed
  • James Tiptree, Jr.
  • Rachel Pollack*
  • Jane Yolen
  • Marta Randall
  • Eleanor Arnason
  • Ellen Asher
  • Patricia A. McKillip
  • Suzy McKee Charnas
  • Lisa Tuttle*
  • Nina Kiriki Hoffman
  • Tanith Lee
  • Pamela Sargent
  • Jayge Carr*
  • Vonda McIntyre
  • Octavia E. Butler
  • Kate Wilhelm
  • Chelsea Quinn Yarbro
  • Sheila Finch
  • Mary Gentle*
  • Jessica Amanda Salmonson*
  • C. J. Cherryh
  • Joan D. Vinge
  • Teresa Nielsen Hayden
  • Ellen Kushner
  • Ellen Datlow
  • Nancy Kress
  • Pat Murphy
  • Lisa Goldstein*
  • Elizabeth Ann Scarborough
  • Mary Turzillo*
  • Connie Willis
  • Barbara Hambly
  • Nancy Holder
  • Sheri S. Tepper
  • Melissa Scott
  • Margaret Atwood
  • Lois McMaster Bujold
  • Jeanne Cavelos
  • Karen Joy Fowler
  • Leigh Kennedy*
  • Judith Moffett
  • Rebecca Ore
    0 Comments on Spreading the Meme: Women in Science Fiction as of 1/1/1900
    Add a Comment
9. Random Dystopian World Generator

Having trouble coming up with a setting for your next dystopian opus? Have no fear. The random world generator is here. This was originally intended for my League of Extraordinary Writers blog post. However, I couldn’t get the Javascript to work on Blogger. Score another one for WordPress, land of the many plug-ins and widgets.

Share/Bookmark

5 Comments on Random Dystopian World Generator, last added: 6/11/2010
Display Comments Add a Comment
10. Anatomy of an Idea

MEMENTO NORA (the novel) started out as a short story I wrote for Odyssey Magazine.  You can read “Memento Nora,” the short story here.  In nutshell, though, the story is about 14-year-old Nora James  going to her first Therapeutic Forgetting Clinic (TFC) to have a memory erased.

Where did the idea come from? My “formula” for this germ of a story was:

OBSESSION + CONSTRAINTS + RESEARCH + WHIM = THIS IDEA
  1. OBSESSION.  I’ve always been fascinated with memory. I’m not sure why, but it was one of those things that grabbed my interest and led to me read about many, many aspects—from the guy who lost his short-term memory because of a railroad spike through his brain (he lived) to studies about aboriginal children having better eidetic memories. So, the topic was something that was already percolating in my brain when I saw the Odyssey theme list.
  2. CONSTRAINTS.  I did write this story for a particular magazine. Odyssey is a tween/teen science magazine that features one short story per issue. Each issue is themed. Obviously, this particular issue was about memory. The guidelines gave a few story ideas, but none were about frozen-yogurt style shops that erase memory. Oh, the story word count had to be under 1000 words.  So the story had to be about memory, for a YA/MG audience, and short.
  3. RESEARCH. So, I set off looking for something within the topic of memory that really grabbed me. It didn’t take long. I ran across an article or two about experimental Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) treatments. The scientists were investigating the use of a common blood pressure medication to lessen the grip of traumatic memories.
  4. WHIM.  What if this treatment could be dispensed as easily as buying a frozen yogurt or a latte? It could be a franchise—like TCBY. (Hence the TFC name.)
At this point, I had the idea—but not the story.  That’s when I start asking myself the hard questions. What kind of society would have TFC’s on every corner? Why would people go? Why wouldn’t they? What would happen if they stopped going? Who would be the least likely hero/heroine?  And so on.

See? This is the hard part—taking your glimmer of an idea to an actual working story.Share/Bookmark

0 Comments on Anatomy of an Idea as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
11. Catching Fire Winner

Amy T! I will contact you via email for your address.

Share/Bookmark

0 Comments on Catching Fire Winner as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
12. How to make up stuff for a living

I do often get asked where I get my ideas. (And sometimes the tone implies a certain concern for the inner workings of my brain.)  I love Neil Gaiman’s take on the question. He’s tried the flippant answers: Idea of the Month club. A corner shop. Pete Atkins.  Now, he just tells people the truth:

‘I make them up,’ I tell them. ‘Out of my head.’

What most people want to know, though, is how to do that.  Every writer has a different way of coming up with ideas. Actually, the idea isn’t the hard part; it’s developing the ideas into a story that’s killer. (An idea isn’t the same thing as a story, but that’s another post.) Here’s what works for me.
  1. Be curious.  Ideas come from being fascinated with something, exploring it, and asking a lot of questions. Observe. Obsess. Absorb.
  2. Read.  Magazines. Books. Web sites. Whatever interests you.  Even watch TV (gasp).
  3. Keep an idea file. Tear out pages of magazines, and/or print out articles. Write them in a notebook. Bookmark things. (Read it Later is a great plug-in for Firefox .) Don’t limit yourself to ideas, per se.  Collect characters and settings, if that’s what inspires you. (I do a little of both.)
  4. Cull from your own life.  What’s fascinated or pissed you off in your life? Did you have a traumatic incident in your childhood? What was your family like?
  5. Put ideas together. Sometimes you’ll have an interesting idea but no story to go with it. If you combine it with another idea or a character or life incident, you might get an amazing story from it.
  6. Trust your own instincts. For me, a good idea resonates somewhere in me. I get that feeling.  That oh-this-is-good feeling when the idea is right. I have rarely gotten that feeling from an idea someone else has come up with and offered to me (thinking they’ve done the hard work).
  7. Use limitations and restrictions to your advantage.  This is going to sound counter to what I just said above, but sometimes a theme or word limit can really spark your creativity.
Sorry, couldn’t think of 10. ;)  In the next post, I’ll break down a short story of mine and share how I came up with the ideas behind it. 

In the mean time, though, how do you come up with your ideas?Share/Bookmark

0 Comments on How to make up stuff for a living as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
13. New blog address

I now have my own domain. (And, yes, I’m the master of my domain.) I migrated the contents of this blog over to a new address:  http://www.angiesmibert.com/blog. Eventually, I’ll have a web site, too.


0 Comments on New blog address as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
14. Writing Goals 2010


  • Participate in a new authors’ marketing group (Y2K11) for Memento Nora
  • Finish and sell Forgetting Curve
  • Start next book
  • Develop better author web site / blog

0 Comments on Writing Goals 2010 as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
15. SCBWI WIP Grant


Evidently I received a Letter of Merit in SCBWI’s 2009 Work-in-Progress Grant competition.  Thanks to Kathryn Gaglione–the other Virginia winner–for pointing it out to me.

0 Comments on SCBWI WIP Grant as of 1/1/1990
Add a Comment
16. The Catalog


My story, “The Catalog,” is in this month’s issue of Odyssey.

0 Comments on The Catalog as of 1/1/1990
Add a Comment
17. Janissary Games


Here’s a pdf of my latest Odyssey story, “Janissary Games.”  Published in ODYSSEY magazine,  July / August 2009, © 2009 Carus Publishing. Used with permission.

0 Comments on Janissary Games as of 1/1/1990
Add a Comment
18. Past Odyssey Stories


Several people have asked me put my stories that appeared in past issues of Odyssey on my blog.  So, I got permission from the magazine to post them.  Here are stories (pdf) up to, but not including, the present one:

  • The Option Package,” published in ODYSSEY magazine,  January 2009, © 2009 Carus Publishing. Used with permission.
  • The BEARs of Syria Planum,” published in ODYSSEY magazine, October 2008, © 2008 Carus Publishing. Used with permission.
  • Memento Nora,” published in ODYSSEY magazine, May/June 2008, © 2008 Carus Publishing. Used with permission.
  • The Boy who Spoke in Colors,” published in ODYSSEY magazine, December 2007, © 2007 Carus Publishing. Used with permission.

I’ll post the ones from July 2009 and September 2009 when I get my copies.

0 Comments on Past Odyssey Stories as of 1/1/1990
Add a Comment
19. Farrago’s & Odyssey


My story “Hollow Woman” is in this quarter’s issue of Farrago’s Wainscot .  (And, no, before anybody asks, it’s not autobiographical.)

And, my story, “Janissary Games,” is in this month’s Odyssey Magazine.  Sorry, no online content.  It’s purely a print mag.

0 Comments on Farrago’s & Odyssey as of 1/1/1990
Add a Comment
20. The Catalog


This story will be in the September 2009 (Techno-Travel) issue of Odyssey.

0 Comments on The Catalog as of 1/1/1990
Add a Comment
21. Hollow Woman


This story will be in the July issue of Farrago’s Wainscot. The Wainscot, btw, won the Million Writers Award for Best New Online Magazine.

0 Comments on Hollow Woman as of 1/1/1990
Add a Comment
22. Janissary Games


Odyssey just accepted this story for their July/August 2009 issue. My story is a rather dark take on the issue’s theme: the biology of play.

0 Comments on Janissary Games as of 1/1/1990
Add a Comment
23. Another Anthology Bites the Dust


Darin Bradley, fiction editor of Farrago’s Wainscot, let me know that Crawlspace, the first FW anthology, is officially dead. Drollerie Press canceled the book “because of the impact of worsening sales.”   In other words, the economy sucks. My story “Living Inside the Box” was going to be in Crawlspace, alongside stories by Forrest Aguirre and Hal Duncan. Dangit. That’s the second anthology my work was supposed to be in that got canned.

0 Comments on Another Anthology Bites the Dust as of 1/1/1990
Add a Comment
24. Writing Science Fiction and Fantasy 101

0 Comments on Writing Science Fiction and Fantasy 101 as of 1/1/1990
Add a Comment