AmateisGal
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 6,126
- Location
- Nebraska
I'm pretty sure it's the 50 star one. I wish I could have talked more to the WW2 vet that I bought it from, but he had lost most of his hearing from being on a Navy destroyer during the war.
I'm pretty sure it's the 50 star one. I wish I could have talked more to the WW2 vet that I bought it from, but he had lost most of his hearing from being on a Navy destroyer during the war.
You could ask the ghost of Ian Fleming. He made a habit of using real brand names in the Bond stories: Rolex watches, Ronson lighters, Bentley cars, Mark Cross wallets, Beretta and Walther pistols, etc. His idea, I've read, was to ground Bond in the world his readers knew (or wished they knew), so as to make Bond's high-flying adventures seem more real. Certainly the association with Bond hasn't hurt the Rolex watch company.. . . I do have a question, however. Is it fine to include real title names of films, music, cars, guns, manufacturers, food companies, and such, in a novel? Will I be breaking copyright laws by merely including passing references such as their names, and nothing else? I will not be putting anything in a derogatory or overly positive perspective, either. These are meant to be subtle references to real pop culture and things that actually exist.
I am still researching the 1910's for my book, and haven't written. How does one go about getting a publisher?
I have about 21 pages of hand written notes of a sort of story screen play set in LA in the mid to late 1930's. But I have set it aside.
Time to check in. How is everyone's writing going?
1) I finished my nonfiction article and currently have an editor of a major history magazine interested. He's looking at it now.
2) Gathering research for my next article and having way too much fun doing so.
3) Novel rewrite is going well.
You?
Time to check in. How is everyone's writing going?
1) I finished my nonfiction article and currently have an editor of a major history magazine interested. He's looking at it now.
2) Gathering research for my next article and having way too much fun doing so.
3) Novel rewrite is going well.
You?
Depends on what kind of book it is.
That's a mighty nice poem Mr. Derek WC.
I'm currently pulled between finishing my mystery novel and a new screenplay. The novel is my sentimental favorite but the characters and plot of the screenplay are much better than what I have in the novel so far. Need to commit to one and get going!
Oh, I quit (all too soon) looking for agents for The Bunny King. I'll work on that another time. I'm no business man, I like to write. So back to writing.
I've finally started editing Among the Damned, and I've returned to writing The Fawney Rig. So far so good I guess. Unfortunately, I've noticed I've been having a really difficult time concentrating. Hope it's nothing serious, but who knows.
It's been nothing but writing and rewriting for me. No agent searches, nothing. I gave up looking for agents for my last novel after hearing one too many times that "World War II doesn't sell." Whatever.
Glad you're writing and editing. And the lack of concentration is probably nothing serious...I think we all go through little "blips" on the writing front. Sometimes it goes great, other times, it's like pulling teeth.