Showing posts with label Michael Brewer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Brewer. Show all posts

Saturday, May 9, 2009

"How to Build a Selling Article" by Michael Brewer

Like most of you, I’ve done a little bit of everything over the years: short-order cook, parking attendant, library shelver, apartment cleaner… Oh, yeah, and I was a drug runner for a while. (I delivered prescriptions for Davis Drugstore in a powder-blue VW Beetle. Drug dealing didn’t pay as well as you might think.)

Nowadays, I preach and write and teach, but my first paying work was helping my dad on construction sites. Dad built houses for a living, and I often worked with him on weekends and during the summer break from school. I’m not particularly gifted with hammer and saw, but I guess all that framing and trimming influenced the way I see things. My book Lessons from the Carpenter from WaterBrook is a loving look at Jesus and how his years as a carpenter might have shaped his preaching and ministry.

One of the workshops I’m leading at the KCW Conference starts from a similar place. If a magazine article were a building project, how would we go about it? What floor plan would work best for the material we want to include? Like houses, most magazine articles follow a carefully selected blueprint. For instance, there’s the Chronology approach and the Inverted Pyramid and the Motivated Sequence. The names may sound odd, but mastering these blueprints is easy. As we review them, you’ll have Aha! moments when you say to yourself, “Oh, sure, I’ve seen that in print.”

You’ll also need an inviting front door for your article—an engaging hook that makes the reader want to enter into your ideas and information. The writer can choose from among a number of standard front door styles such as the Question, the Multi-Example, the Startler, the Quotation, or Personal Involvement. Which opening will best suit your style as a writer and fit well with the floor-plan of your article?

On the other end, you’ll also want to install a back door to send your reader happily on his/her way. What is your goal? To remind the reader of what you’ve covered? To leave him inspired or comforted? To motivate her to action? To bring a smile? Your back door will guarantee that you achieve the desired effect.

Whew! Are we finished yet? Not quite.

We still need to personalize our house— Uh, I mean our article. The voice or style we adopt will be crucial in touching the thoughts and feelings of our reader. Even more important is slant—deciding what to tell and what to leave out, determining what to emphasize, and cultivating ideas for future articles that will emerge from our original research and thinking.

Is that it? Nah, that’s just the teaser.

To get the hands-on, practical, down-and-dirty stuff, you’ll need to join me in my workshop in Elizabethtown.

I’ll save you a seat in the front.

Brewer is author of four books. He is a full-time pastor in the Presbyterian Church and adjunct professor of religious studies at Northern Kentucky University. See a review of Brewer's book here. Visit his website for more on his other books.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Faculty Book Reviews on Blog

I meant to post this message sometime in May, but I made a mistake today that makes it necessary for me to go ahead and post it now.

You may have just received a blog post containing a book review that seemed to have nothing to to with KCWC. Well, you're right. It didn't! Somehow, I managed to select the wrong blog from my Blogger dashboard when I posted that one. I did delete the post from the KCWC blog, but I couldn't stop it from sending the feed to subscribers.

Now, let me tell you about my book review blog. Earlier this year, I decided I wanted to post reviews of books by our 2009 KCWC faculty so that potential conferees could become familiar with some of these writers' work. I may add some more during May, so you might want to bookmark the blog or subscribe. For now, here are the direct links to faculty reviews:

Terry Whalin: Jumpstart Your Publishing Dreams

Virginia Smith: Just as I Am

Lettie Kirkpatrick Burress: Glimpses of Grace: Stories of Hope

James Watkins: Squeezing the Good Out of Bad

Michael Brewer: Lessons from the Carpenter

If new reviews are posted, I will try to remember to announce it on the KCWC blog.

And again, my apologies for the "blog post from outer space."

PS---May 10th is the deadline for early registration and senior discounts. Visit the website now: http://www.kychristianwriters.com.

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Faculty Buzz - Michael Brewer, Jan Watson

Michael Brewer: http://www.hmichaelbrewer.com/

H. Michael Brewer sold his first story at the age of fourteen. He’s never recovered from the writing bug! He has written over three hundred articles and short pieces, winning national awards for both fiction and non-fiction. He is the author of four books, most recently Lessons from the Carpenter published by WaterBrook. Michael is a fulltime pastor in the Presbyterian Church and an adjunct professor of religious studies at Northern Kentucky University. He doesn’t do anything in his spare time because he doesn’t have any.

Brewer will be teaching two workshops.

WHAT SUPERMAN AND BATMAN TAUGHT ME ABOUT WRITING
Comic book heroes are enjoying a resurgence on television and the silver screen because those childhood characters still excite and uplift us. Generations have absorbed life lessons from the likes of Spider-Man and the X-Men. This workshop offers inspiration for the writing life, for closet heroes, and for all who reach for the sky. (Capes are optional.)

MATTHEW, MARK, LUKE, JOHN...AND YOU
Why do we have four gospels written about one Savior? Because each gospel writer brings to the task his particular slant, unique style, and personal vision of Christ. God wants you to use your personality and your passions in your writing ministry. As we consider how Matthew and company poured themselves into their writing, we will discover ways to tap the unique vision and voice that God gives to each of us.

Jan Watson

A retired registered nurse of twenty-five years, Jan Watson specialized in the care of newborns and their mothers. Jan has three sons and is a charter member of Southern Acres Christian Church in Lexington, Ky. Jan's hobbies are reading, antiquing and entertaining her Jack Russell terrier, Maggie.

Jan's first novel, Troublesome Creek, won the 2004 Jerry B. Jenkins Christian Writers Guild Operation First Novel Contest. The sequel, Willow Springs, was selected as one of the Library Journal's 2007 Best Books. Her third book in the Troublesome Creek series,Torrent Falls, will be released Feb. 2008. Currently, she is working on a new series. Her books are listed on Amazon.

http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_ss_b/103-0419576-7621441?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=jan+watson&x=10&y=17

Jan's workshop is So You Want To Write Inspirational Fiction: Six Tips To Jump Start Your Success. Jan Watson shares how she overcame common writing obstacles to become an award-winning author.