A writer's guide to Christmas newsletters - Roz Morris
It's fashionable to
diss them in the UK,
but I disagree. Even if the missive is smug and airbrushed and claims the
golden offspring can split the atom, it’s more meaningful than a card that only
says 'from Nina and Frederik'.
But since I approve of Christmas newsletters, that means I
must compose one. And I don't know what to put.
I spent this year writing, rewriting, talking to other writers
and, er, working out what to write next. Sure, there was adventure and
atom-splitting, but it happened on the page and in my head.
And that's my update. One paragraph. How can I spread it
out?
When in doubt, study the requirements
of the genre.
Boasting
Christmas letters need boasting, with bells on. Your friends
will report a mighty throng of promotions, bonuses, and other unceasing
achievements. Traditionally published authors can name-drop with the imprints
they've wooed but indies also have a wealth of impressive material. Deploy the
word 'bestseller'. Normal folks don't know how niches work or how chart
positions soar and dip every hour. If you're feeling really bold, trot out blog
awards. The Happy Candy Sweetness Blogger doesn't sound that far from the
Costa.
Hobbies
Your newsletter-writing friends will list their
accomplishments in karate, ballroom dancing, local politics, golf, the PTA.
Fortunately as a writer, you are blessed with the ability to acquire unexpected
expertise. Pick juicy subjects you’ve been researching but remember it's family
viewing. Please, no '50 vile ways to murder with a drug overdose', it's
'needlework'.
Holidays
Forget how much strife it took to travel afar. Yes, you had
to complete twice as much work first. Yes, the night before, you fell in love
with your novel and couldn't bear to leave it. Despite all this, you must say
it was the trip of a lifetime (it certainly felt that long without a manuscript
to escape to).
Pets
You can talk about your works in progress if you pretend
they are your cats. The newest is adorable. The fat old thing who’s sprawled on
your laptop for years has outstayed its welcome. Another has been forcibly
stuffed under the bed and won’t be let out until June. Perhaps leave out the
news that little Nanowrimo may be euthanased or chopped up to make something
better.
Time to die |
Children and family
Open the study door and check if you have real children,
husbands etc. (Hint - you may need to ask their names.) Mention them in the
newsletter or the reader may fear disaster. Also, talk about your books that
have fled the nest. If your fiction is taking a while to make its mark, report
that it is on a gap year while it finds itself. Or finds anyone, really.
Use the Christmas
letter as preparation
For a few mad days, there will be socialising. Oh mighty
dread. Dialogue will not be editable and we will have to talk to characters we
haven't studied first. Penning a Christmas letter is good practice for your
return to earthly form.
Merry Christmas.
Roz Morris is a
bestselling ghostwriter and
book doctor. She blogs at Nail Your Novel and is on Twitter as @Roz_Morris. Her literary novels are here and her writing books are here. You can also listen to or download a free audio of the first 4 chapters of one of her novels right here.
book doctor. She blogs at Nail Your Novel and is on Twitter as @Roz_Morris. Her literary novels are here and her writing books are here. You can also listen to or download a free audio of the first 4 chapters of one of her novels right here.
Comments
Thanks
Know what you mean about the misery letter. While looking on line at what others have said about this subject I found some deathly wallows.
I enjoy reading Christmas newsletters as well, although I've never written one. Perhaps next year.
Happy holidays!
,-)
Lee - thanks, and it's not too late to send a Christmas email!
Susan - I'm sure I've heard of that story. Lightning is such useful stuff.
(That Nina & Frederik LP brought back fond memories...)