Category Archives: Resources

Speak Up: Three Public Speaking Tips

Tip One:

Use the microphone. I know you hate it. I know you’re scared of it. I know it want to press it to your breastbone instead of holding it up like you’re Britney Spears. You need to be closer than you think and you need to speak more slowly than you think. In the end, this doesn’t just help the people who need you to use the microphone so they can hear–it helps the people who can’t hear you because you’re not using the microphone.

Tip Two:

Don’t ask for screaming or cheering. I can’t tell you how often school visitors tell groups of kids they want to HEAR THEM–and then they don’t understand why those same kids won’t settle down and listen to the presentation. Very few presenters are good enough to pull those reins back in after the yelling. Kids get a lot of mixed signals about how to be a good listener or audience member, and it’s likely that their teacher has been working on those skills, too, so that those kids know how to show the presenter and each other respect. There are lots of great ways to keep your audience engaged that don’t involve asking the audience to Kermit-flail for you…but that’s for another post.

Tip Three:

If you hate public speaking, or you don’t feel that you’re very good at it, write down what you want to say, and practice reading rather than speaking. To help with speaking, consider joining Toastmasters. I thought this was some sort of organization sort of like the Elks or whatever until my employer started a chapter. Basically, you meet with other people who probably don’t or didn’t like speaking, and participate as much or as little as you like. The meetings are very structured and fast-paced, and consist of opportunities to give short prepared speeches (like 4-6 minutes’ worth) or answer extemporaneous questions, as well as to speak briefly to run the meeting. I’ve watched people go from shaking like a leaf (literally) to composed and confident (outwardly, at least) in a just a few weeks; all they needed was some practice. (Obviously, some folks may need more than practice, like counseling or medication to help anxiety, and Toastmasters might not be enough in that situation.) At any rate, I recommend this resource.

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Resource: Plot, Character, Belief

Cynthia Leitich Smith writes a variety of great books; I stayed up late one night enjoying the twist on vampires and angels in Eternal, for example, and my household has collected a number of her other works, like Rain Is Not My Indian Name, which has been near the top of my to-read pile for a while now. (The delay is not the fault of the book–rather, my to-read pile is too big, and my progress is regularly interrupted by have-to-reads.) In addition, Cynthia has a blog, Cynsations, that always has something good on it, whether it’s an interview, a guest post, a giveaway, a link write up, or something else.

The other day, Cynsations hosted a guest post by Franny Billingsley, author of Chime (which has a lovely slippery feeling to it). In the post, there’s a discussion of plot and character informing one another; while of course they do, we so often break out plot and character that it’s easy to forget how intertwined they are.

Separately, I am pleased to report that I’ll be returning as a first-round panelist for the Cybils in the young adult speculative fiction category (formerly SF/F). I’ve never done much book blogging on this site, but I have on Undusty New Books on Blogger; I am still in the long, slow process of combining blogs. (It was much easier the last couple of times I moved e-house!) I’ve adjusted this site to pull an RSS feed of reviews over.

Nominations for the Cybils open October 1 and close October 15; anyone may nominate books according to the eligibility rules. It’s great to know that someone nominated you–you have a fan! Publishers and self-publishers can nominate as well, but look closely at the rules; there’s a separate process.

Coming up, I’ll be away at Sirens, a conference-slash-retreat on and for women in fantasy. This year’s guests include Alaya Dawn Johnson, Ellen Kushner, Robin LaFevers, and Guadalupe Garcia McCall. The theme for 2013 is “reunion”; since it is the conference’s fifth year, we are revisiting past themes of warriors, faeries, monsters (and the monstrous woman) and retellings. I love the opportunity to sit down and talk about things like this, as opposed to the scenario where I sit down and am talked at. I still sway toward talked at, because I tend to absorb before speaking, or being on the talking-to side of the table, because I like to prepare, but there are opportunities at Sirens to be part of conversation, as an official presenter or not.

A recent irritation: ordering a new hardcover book and having it show up as a paperback ARC. Did you think nobody would notice? In a different vein, I’ve been thinking about reality-show or entertainment behind-the-scenes types of stories, like Elimination Night and Confessions of a Backup Dancer. I supposeĀ The Hunger Games andĀ Catching Fire fits in here too. What else goes on a list that starts here?

And finally, last in my list of only slightly related things, I have been for many years looking for a children’s/middle grade/young adult book that was on the library shelves in 1989 or earlier. (The library I used for closed for renovations for several years starting in that year; I vaguely remember that I read less during that time period. I also think I remember that this book lived in the back left-hand corner of the children’s room in the pre-renovated version, on a mid-level shelf….) I believe that there was a girl who was part of an elite that could play a game of sorts, and that there was a boy who couldn’t understand the game at all. I think it used some combination of music or perception not open to everyone. Eventually, they ran away, and at some point, got food from a vendor. The girl was very surprised to find out that the food was rabbit. Perhaps she didn’t eat meat? The book probably had to have a neutral cover or a girl or it, or I might not have picked it up. I sought out books with girls in, you see. I’d love to find this book again. I’d also like to find a(n equivalent of today’s middle grade) book wherein there are witches and one of the spells involves saying the alphabet backwards. I read that spell over and over and I can still recite starting from Z.

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Filed under Conferences, Fantasy, Publishing, Reading, Resources, SF and SpecFic, Travel, Writing, YA