Do you think we evolved, if nobody gets involved? Excerpt from patleclerc.com/is-the-world-real/ Art Changes Lives, patleclerc.com/book/
Illustration by @patleclerc_official
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Do you think we evolved, if nobody gets involved? Excerpt from patleclerc.com/is-the-world-real/ Art Changes Lives, patleclerc.com/book/
Illustration by @patleclerc_official

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
I Will Go Away by Dennis Andrew Massei, aka the acapella singer and Denny Dymes, my pen name. Author of Faith and Inspiration Volume One. Published March 1st, 2024 by Austin Macauley Publishers. God bless us, everyone, and God bless the USA đșđž
Ways Your Publisher Will Know That Youâre An Amateur Writer
1. Using All Caps This is considered shouting at your reader and is frowned upon by agents. Use stronger verbs to show urgency in your writing rather than this. Once someone points out how annoying all caps is, it will bug you too.Â
2. Using Multiple Punctuation For example, donât use ?!?!!?!?!?!?! Save it for texting.Â
3. Overusing Exclamation Points Unless a character is actually shouting, donât use these. No matter how dramatic it is. Use strong verbs or body language descriptors. Itâs annoying! See! How obnoxious is this?!?!
4. Using bizarre fonts, formats, or text sizes Stick to a standard font such as Ariel or Times New Roman, 12pt, and double spaced. Even if you hate it. Itâs much easier to read.Â
5. Using Filler Words (too much) Words such as just, that, only, really, seemed, almost, slightly, are examples of words that might be removed from your MS. Do not go to the extreme of this and remove every that in your MS, because that has multiple uses. If you can read your sentence without it, and it still makes sense, cut it. Example: Katie said that Jared was mad. Remove that: Katie said Jared was mad. Makes sense still. When not to use this rule: When the sentence feel like it has a better flow with that that in place. If that post about that that word wasnât that confusing, you are on your way to become a good writer!Â
6. Using too many adverbs Truly, eloquently using illustriously contrived adverbs is overrated. Which is more impactful? âLook out!â Katie said loudly. or âLook out!â Katie shouted. This is an easy example, but you get the point. Strong verbs for another win
7. Using too many big words This may sound counter intuitive, but if youâre writing with big words (especially if those big words are not used appropriately) your publisher will know you are an amateur. As I heard once--own a thesaurus, but keep it in the shed across the yard. Donât flip through it looking for the biggest word you can find.Â
Dear Art Directors! I have a question about literary agents and getting published. Through a small grant I ordered 5 copies of a children's book I wrote and illustrated through Blurb. I'm curious if you have any tips for finding literary agents and knowing who would be a good fit. I'm trying to craft a list of 5 agents or publishers to send my book to but I'm at a loss of where to begin. Thanks so much for all your time and effort!
My advice to anyone looking to break into publishing is to go to a bookstore and find a whole stack of books that are as close to what you are trying to do as possible. Same genre, format, target age, etc. Then go to the acknowledgements/thanks and see who the agents were (usually authors thank their agents) or look on the authorâs website, or as a last resort google âauthor nameâ + âagentâ and youâll get the agent name. Go to the agentâs website. There will be very specific submission guidelines. Follow them and submit. Be prepared to get a lot of rejections, but donât be discouraged. You will either get offers or feedback from these agents, and eventually you will be picked up by one. Hereâs some good links on pitching your book project:
How to Write a Book Proposal
23 Agent Query Letters That Worked
âAgent KillFee
Life is still beautiful ! Enjoy đ Excerpt from patleclerc.com/relax-read-breathe/ Art Changes Lives, patleclerc.com/book/
Illustration by @patleclerc_official

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
Is it possible to dream peace into existence? Excerpt from patleclerc.com/imagine-compassion/ Art Changes Lives, patleclerc.com/book/ Photo by Liane Blanchard Illustration by @patleclerc_official
Does it sound right? Excerpt from patleclerc.com/are-you-reading-listening/ Art Changes Lives, patleclerc.com/book/
Illustration by @patleclerc_official
Create good energy âïžchange the narrative ! Excerpt from patleclerc.com/i-am-not-pre-tending/ Art Changes Lives, patleclerc.com/book/
Illustration by @patleclerc_official