Anne Laurel Carter's Blog
January 22, 2018
New Digs, New Walk
I just moved to Ward’s Island, a short ferry ride away from downtown Toronto.[image error]
My husband and I first began dreaming of living and raising our four children on the island when they were little. We paid our annual dues and were on the purchaser’s list for twenty-three years before we got the phone call. That’s a long time to wait for a dream.
In the last six years whenever the renewal form arrived we’d reconsider staying on the list. We’d moan, “We’re getting older.” Then we’d laugh. “So what!”...
January 17, 2017
Ten Tips to Guide a Novel Revision

Sketchbook and pens.
I recently gave a workshop on novel revision at CANSCAIP’s annual PYI conference.I am currently following my own advice: I put my novel aside for 2 months andhave beenenjoying right brain activities, notably art, in whichI play with colourand images witha Buddhist attitude of detachment (no ego, no ambitions).
Last week I began to read through a hard copy of my novel, making notes,seeing with fresh eyes the weaknesses and strengths of mystory, and gatheringthe energyto di...
April 6, 2016
After Submission, Surviving The Wait
It’s been eightyears since I submitted a novel for publication. Another era, when weheard back in 3-4 weeks. Because I attendCANSCAIP andSCBWI conferences, readwriters’ blogs and posts at Query Tracker, and network with other novelists. I knowa currentsubmission will take longer.
One thing however holdstrue. To survive the wait, a writer must engage in otherprojects. I’ve been writingpicture books. Playing piano. Visitingdeserts (photo is thelittlestlibrary in Arizona).Best of all, I’ve bee...
January 22, 2016
Fantasy – all the way to Maroochydore!

Weta Studio, Wellington, NZ
In the last sixyears,I’ve felt a strong need for high fantasy,a genre I loveto read and amwritingfor the first time.My last novel (contemporary, realistic) was published in 2008. Since then the challenges facing me feltunusuallybeyond-my control. Parents withAlzheimers. Children turnedadults. Health. At my desk, being able to resolve my heroine’s struggleinanotherworldbecame a source of immense satisfaction.

Road sign, NZ
Whyfantasy more than other genres? Partly p...
July 20, 2015
Writing the YA Novel and Procrastination
Michael Martchenko once gave a hilarious and informative presentation at one of our free monthly CANSCAIPmeetings in Toronto. He showed numerous photos of himself procrastinating (at the fridge, on the sofa, and back to the kitchen) and I realized: illustrators do it too. We all do it. Whatever our endeavour, no matter how much we love it, the mind has creativefun sabotaging the work. I shouldn’tshame myself by disclosing the myriad ways I find to procrastinate but that’s the point of this po...
May 29, 2015
Breathing life into a chase scene
Camel riding in Rajashtan Desert
Myhero getschased across adesert and has to command
some bad-tempered camels. If I’m going to write it,
Ilike totry it myself. (They didn’t listen to me.)
As if I needed areason to visit India.
And since she loves reptiles, what about a sidewindingsnake?
The post Breathing life into a chase scene appeared first on Anne Laurel Carter.
May 27, 2015
To plot or not to plot
After five years working on myepic YA fantasy (a new genre for me) I got into serious trouble with plotting.Plotting was much easier when I could rely on history, research, and interviews to fuel the key incidents.In a fantasy, I hadto make it all up.
For help, I attended workshops lead by three Hollywood screenwriting gurus: Robert McKee, Chris Vogler, and John Truby. All were good, McKee’s rather expensive, and if I had to pick only one, hands down, it would be John Truby’s 3 day Masterclas...
November 16, 2014
Did you miss Inspire?
Theycertainly got the name right. I attended all three days of Toronto’s brand new International Book Fair. Upstairs at the convention centre I was surrounded by book people and (is there a better word?) inspired by icons like Chris Hadfield,Dav Pilkey, and Margaret Atwood. I unexpectedly criedwhen I saw Chris Hadfield, perhaps because he represented the overarching message of the fair in his humble way: find a way to express what you really care even if you’re aSpace Oddity.When you do itin...
November 15, 2014
Research helps fantasy worldbuilding
Condors over Colca Canyon
Vivid writing is all about details and a good fantasy demands a believable new world. Because we’rein a fluctuating imaginative state when we write, we can easily and unconsciously usewhat I calldefault details – unoriginal bits ourbrains have stored from previously read or viewed material. The unique combining of unusualcharacteristics helps our individual brains create something new. For me, a research trip has always opened doors (and closed bank accounts) when I n...
Research to create unique fantasy world-building
Condors over Colca Canyon
Vivid writing is all about details and a good fantasy demands a believable new world. Because we’rein a fluctuating imaginative state when we write, we can easily and unconsciously usewhat I calldefault details – unoriginal bits ourbrains have stored from previously read or viewed material. The unique combining of unusualcharacteristics helps our individual brains create something new. For me, a research trip has always opened doors (and closed bank accounts) when I n...
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