A. Victoria Mixon, Editor
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  • Hi Victoria,
    I’ve been stumbling across your blog many times and many of your articles are are marked as favorite under my Stumbleupon account. I have nursed my passion for writing since high school and I now will be entering my Junior year of college. I would like to write in Historical, Fantasy, and general Fiction genre. I am currently researching about the Tudor period for a novel I would someday like to write. I was wondering if you have suggestions on ways to manage research and maintaining historical accuracy.–Melanie Lambrecht

    Why, thank you, Melanie. How kind. I know I get the majority of my visitors from Stumbleupon, but I never know who’s sticking around and who’s just passing through.

    Yes, your research must be meticulous in this day and age, as so many professionals are writing about their specialties and the availability of information is simply staggering. Your competition is fierce—your research has got to be as good as (or better than!) theirs.

    So I’m going to do something a little different with this question: I’m going to refer you to a book. Roz Morris has written and self-published a small book called Nail Your Novel in which she teaches all about handling research. Roz has ghost-written eleven books for which she needed to do a tremendous amount of research, and her book is based on how she handled it.

    I’m guessing she did it right, too, because eight of those eleven books became best sellers.

    I know she’s in the middle of revamping it—altering the interior design and (I think) even re-doing the cover—but it’s the same information, whether you get the original or revamped edition.

    I use her advice. Everyone should.

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  • Victoria, You have changed my whole outlook on what good writing is and is not. Thanks.

    I am from the South. Texas to be exact. I am writing a story about the South. The hill country of Tennessee to be exact. I am confused about whether to use or not use contractions, local idioms, expressions, and other regional influences in my writing. I have read conflicting opinions about these matters. We in the South use very colorful and often specific expressions, many of which are cliches. I understand cliches being a problem and that fresh expressions make for fresh writing. So, how should I handle this problem? Thanks and keep it out of the ditch!—Jocko

    Ah, you’re talking about the difference between narrative voice and dialog. One is the author speaking, and the other is the characters speaking.

    The trick to showcasing dialect is to make it the smallest percentage of your writing possible, casting the rest of your writing in standard English. Because dialect requires effort on the part of the reader, it is most attractive to the reader for whom that effort is the least i.e. readers from the writer’s native area. However, this eliminates a huge percentage of your potential readership. So you appeal to that huge percentage by casting the majority of your work in English we have all agreed to understand the same way, by virtue of dictionaries and school. Keep alternate pronunciation of words to a minimum to give them the greatest impact.

    On the other side of the coin, because regional influences are surprising and unique and often intensely vivid, they create a wonderful opportunity for the writer to flesh out their story in a three-dimensional world. So they’re a goldmine—particularly if this is regional influence bred into your bones, so just the right snappy turn of phrase tends to surface at just the right moment from your decades-old subconscious. Put that in your characters’ voices. Showcase it with Standard English in your narrative.

    I have a whole chapter on this in The Art & Craft of Fiction. The short version is: lean on your idiomatic language and expressions, your regional cliches that are not cliche elsewhere, and try not to draw attention to yourself with fancy dialectic punctuation and spelling.

    In particular, if you’re a Southerner, read Flannery O’Connor and Eudora Welty to learn how to do it right. Those two were masters.

    (My Gampie was from Fort Davis in the Fort Davis Mountains. Although he moved to Southern California as a young man, he never lost his twang.)

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Preditors & Editors

Clients’ Successes

Scott Warrender
Short story author Scott Warrender is a Mentoring Program client. I have done full Copy, Line, & Developmental Editing on a number of short stories for him, the first of which was his poignant fictional memoir of Africa, ''The Boy With the Newsprint Kite,'' now published in the Foundling Review.

Clients’ Books


Bhaichand Patel is the author of two nonfiction books: Chasing the Good Life (Penguin Books India, October, 2006), and Happy Hours (Penguin Books India, October, 2009). I recently edited Patel's debut novel, When the Streets Were Dark and Cold.


Although my contribution to Baby Jesus Pawn Shop was only a peer critique and participation in a standing ovation, in 2009 I edited two nonfiction essays for my friend Lucia Orth.


The poet Chris Ryan is the author of The Bible of Animal Feet (Farfalla Press, 2007). He has new stories forthcoming in Pank, Anemone Sidecar, and A Cappella Zoo. I edited Ryan's debut novel The Ishmael Blade.