Due to overwhelming demand, we’re happy to report that Nina’s Master Writing Class will open to more members, starting January 2011. Here’s what you get:
$49/month guarantees you four weekly coaching sessions a month in this exclusive club of writing enthusiasts.
In this Master Writing Class you meet with Nina once a week in a teleseminar for an hour of lecture and discussion on popular writing and publishing topics. Each of you gets a chance to ask Nina questions on specific issues you are facing during the question and answer period following her entertaining lecture. Nina covers all the big issues that both new and established writers face daily in their careers. as she brings her wit and humor to examples from her own adventures as a pre-published and published writer.
Issues like:
getting started
dealing with time management & writer’s block
getting those ideas down and making a story out of them
focusing and maintaining the staying power to finish
incorporating all the elements of good storytelling like plot, character, theme and setting into a seamless story
making your writing compelling, clear and exciting
doing research and editing
marketing, synopses & outlines, query letters
overcoming fear (of failure, of success, of everything)
During each session you have the chance to discuss any topic you are facing in your current writing project. Join our group, participate and learn.
Here’s what some of Nina’s coaching students say:
“Nina was warm and encouraging. I felt free to share my fears and ask questions. She was extremely knowledgeable, gracious and honest. I felt as though she really wanted me to succeed as a writer, and was a mentor sent to provide guidance and inspiration.”–Zoe Hicks, GA
“Nina Munteanu’s command of the subject matter and her ability to explain in a way that the audience understood was excellent. As a hopeful author, I found her words inspiring.”—Amanda Lott, GA
“Rarely have I encountered someone of Nina’s considerable talent and intellect tied to such an extraordinary work ethic…A gifted and inventive writer, Nina is also an excellent speaker who is able to communicate complicated ideas in simple terms and generate creative thought in others. Her accessible, positive approach and delightful sense of humor set people at ease almost immediately.”–Heather Dugan, OH
“Nina provided invaluable advice with humour and finesse. It’s great to have access to such a friendly and funny individual who’s willing to be a sounding board to both beginning and career writers.”–Marie Bilodeau, Ontario
“What you’ve done for me, Nina, is you’ve just opened up a whole new world. You’ve shown me how to put soul into my books.”–Hectorine Roy, Nova Scotia
Classes run every Thursday at 2 pm EST starting January 5th. There are limited spaces for this Master Class so availability will be on a first come basis. Once you successfully register, you will get an email with information on how to get in on the next call. Sign up for your first class here the first week of January 2011. See you in January!
UPDATE:Thanks for your wonderful response. Registration is now closed due to full capacity. Please check us at the beginning of each month for openings to Nina’s Master Class. In the meantime, please check out Nina’s online courses and if you have a project that needs a jumpstart or some work check Nina’s one-on-one coaching opportunities.
The Hero’s Journey: Plotting Your Way to Publishing Success –November 6, 2010, 2-4 pm at the Bridgewater Library, Bridgewater, NS
Are you stuck in your writing project? Can’t focus? Not sure about the characters or where the story is going? These all relate to plot. All stories consist of common structural elements found universally in myth, fairy tale, dreams and movies. Scholar and mythologist Joseph Campbell, author of The Hero with a Thousand Faces, took the concept of the Hero’s Journey from the depth psychology of Swiss psychologist Carl Jung and assigned 12 steps to the Hero’s Journey within the three-act play. Internationally published novelist and essayist Nina Munteanu shares details of this highly successful plot approach that will improve and jumpstart your writing and guarantee its improved marketability.
Cost: $55/student; price includes text book, “The Fiction Writer: Get Published, Write Now!” (worth $27), and work sheets. Students are expected to bring an example of their current work.
Register for the Hero’s Journey Course through Nova Scotia South Shore Libraries. CLOSED–sold out. Check our online The Hero’s Journey course in Winter/Spring 2011.
How to Use Blogs and Social Networking to Promote Yourself — November 13, 2010, 2-4 pm at the Bridgewater Library, Bridgewater, NS
Most promotion by authors is currently done online. The many opportunities boggle the mind, however, particularly for those of us who aren’t terribly proficient with internet social media. Both published and soon-to-be published authors are using Blogs, Facebook, YouTube, Websites with podcasts and other social networks to great success. Learn how to command this incredibly inexpensive and highly potent and efficient medium to promote you and your work.
Internationally published author and essayist Nina Munteanu is an active blogger and proficient social networker of many years. She publishes several blogs and participates in many social networks on the internet. Nina will share her knowledge and experience in this interactive discussion and multi-media lecture. Nina will go over steps on how to build a blog, and cover topics like how to get traffic to your site, Search Engine Optimizatin (SEO), what makes a good blog, how to write copy, the pros and cons of social networking, and other topics related to internet promotion and marketing. Bring your imagination.
Cost: $40/student; price includes worksheets, example blog articles.
Register for the Blogging/Social Networking Course through Nova Scotia South Shore Libraries. CLOSED — sold out.
Monthly continuing: Nina’s Master Writing Class (limited seats, by invitation only)
Hello writers! Have you watched my FREE webinar ”Get Published with Nina, The Writing Coach” through Writer’s Digest University yet? It’s still running by popular demand.
The letter from the Editor in the August 10, 2010 Writer’s Digest Newsletter said:
We often get people asking if we offer free webinars. Well, this week those folks (and you) are in luck: Sign up for “Get Published with Nina, The Writing Coach,” a free on-demand webinar where host Nina Munteanu answers some of the most frequently asked questions that writers need to know. And the best part of on-demand is that you can watch it whenever you want, where ever you want, which means two things: Computer required, pants optional.
Take care of yourself and your writing,
Brian A. Klems
Newsletter Editor
Writer’s Digest
Looks like people are enjoying the Webinar. Here’s a comment Writer’s Digest shared with us from a Webinar student:
“Words can not express the joy I received by watching the video with the two authors [Vernon Oikle and me] on The Writing Coach, Can Help You Get Published. Thanks so much.”
The webinar is still online at Writer’s Digest. If you hurry you can still register for it and view this entertaining and educational conversation about things writers need to know to get published. For FREE!
Join her for a free webinar where she will share some of her best tips for getting published. She will also answer some frequently asked questions that came straight from Writer’s Digest!
See you there!
Welcome to Nina Munteanu’s Online Writing Courses!
To view courses offered in 2011 and to register for courses, go to the online courses page.
Your instructor, Nina Munteanu, is an internationally published author of several novels, short stories and essays. She has taught science and writing courses for over twenty years and has coached many beginning and established writers over the years toward successful publication. Her textbook on writing, “The Fiction Writer: Get Published, Write Now!” is used by schools and universities throughout North America.
Yes, I’m a successfully published author with acclaimed novels, short stories and essays published all over the world. But I almost didn’t get there. What if I told you that I never read as a kid, I was the worst speller in my school and I used bad grammar? I didn’t excel in typing class and practically failed English 101. Based on my Career Aptitude Test score, the school counselor recommended that I go into some trade like car mechanic. Believe me, I started from behind.
I’ve experienced your disappointment and your fear—and prevailed.
I’ve battled the gridlock of time and schedule conflicts, priority problems and lack of support from family and friends—and forged a way.
I’ve felt lonely and depressed because no one understood my dream or took it seriously—and found a community.
I’ve been lost in a sea of unfocused ideas, undirected plot, excessive—even boring—characters—and created a masterpiece of tense page-turning excitement.
I understand your pain, your moments of hesitation and lack of confidence, your yearning. I’ve been rejected and rejected and rejected—and then published!
Are you a storyteller? Because that’s where it all starts. With a story. The rest is window dressing. Every author is on a journey, a hero’s journey, really. Because that’s what most writers are: heroes. We journey into the dark frightening abyss and return with the prize for the world: truth. The writer’s life is not really romantic, like many believe. It is rife with doubt, rejection, betrayal and disappointment. But it is also graced with the richness of joy, satisfaction, energy and fulfillment. When a writer writes what he or she is passionate about, there is nothing better. Absolutely nothing. So, let me tell you a story now, about how I almost didn’t become a writer but did because it was what I had to do. Like most stories, this one has a beginning, middle and an end…
The Beginning: The Sweet Promise
When I was ten years old, I knew what I wanted to be when I grew up: I was going to be a paperback writer. It was 1964 and I’d taken my favorite rock group’s song to heart, the Beatles’ “I Want to be a Paperback Writer”. It was an incredible moment of clarity for me and despite being challenged by my stern and unimaginative primary school teacher, who kept trying to corral me into being “normal”, I wasn’t going to let anyone stem my creativity and eccentric—if not wayward—approach to literature, language and writing. I was a confident, but lovable, little brat and I knew it. She and I didn’t exactly get along, as a result. But I did okay anyway, and, despite her acidic commentary (I didn’t cross my “t”s the way she wanted me to), Miss House begrudgingly awarded me my due A’s and B’s.
Nina pretending to read
I wrote some fan fiction but quickly found my own creations far more interesting and less limiting. As a teenager, I wrote, directed and recorded “radio plays” with my sister. When we weren’t bursting into riotous laughter, it was actually pretty good. She and I shared a bedroom in the back of the house and at bedtime we opened our doors of imagination to a cast of thousands. We fed each other wild stories of space travel, adventure and intrigue, murmuring and giggling well into the dark night long after our parents were snoring in their beds. Those days scintillated with liberating originality, excitement and joy. I also enjoyed animation and drew several cartoon strips, peopled with crazy characters as I dreamt of writing graphic novels like Green Lantern, Magnus, Robot Fighter and Spiderman. My hero was science fiction author and futurist, Ray Bradbury; I vowed to write profoundly stirring tales like he did. Stories that mattered. Stories that lingered with you long after you finished them. Stories that made you think and dream and changed you imperceptibly.
I had found what excites me—my passion for telling stories—and I’d inadvertently stumbled upon an important piece of the secret formula for success: 1) having discovered my passion, I decided on a goal; 2) I found and wished to emulate a “hero” who’d achieved that goal and therefore had a “case study”; 3) I applied myself to the pursuit of my goal. Oops… the third one, well…
…It went downhill from there…
Life got in the way.
I grew up.
The Middle: The Struggles & Confusion of “Reality”
Well, that, and the environment intervened. In several ways. It started with my parents. Recognizing my talent and interest in the fine arts (I was pretty good in visual arts), they pushed me to get a fine arts degree in university and go into teaching or advertizing. They made it obvious that fiction writing was not a viable career or a forté of mine (I was lousy at spelling and, despite my ability to tell stories and my love for graphic novels, I didn’t read books!). I can still remember my father’s lecture about how perfect the teaching or nursing profession was for me. I wasn’t enamored by either. The second blow to my author-ego came in the form of a school “interest-ability” test, meant to prepare us for our career decisions. I remember the test consisting of an IQ portion (spatial, English and math), and a psychology portion (including problem-solving and scenarios meant to tease out our affinity for a particular career). Secretly harboring my paperback novelist dream, I filled out my forms with great excitement. I still remember the deflating results, which suggested that I was best suited to be a sergeant in the army! LOL! Remember what I said about my spelling and grammar. “Writing” as a career barely made it on the graph, and scored well below “computer programmer” and “mechanic”; none of which interested me.
Forest road near home
Dante’s Forest
I began to see a career in advertizing as a viable option; my love and abilities in cartooning seemed to naturally tie in with this pursuit. I also had an affinity for graphic design. So, I deferred to the “wisdom” of others and let myself be diverted and distracted by clever reasoning and an appeal to logic. I did what I thought I should do, not what truly excited me.
I still quietly held my dream of being a paperback novelist close to my heart, even if it was closeted in my subconscious. But self-expression had dwindled to a trickle; the creative flow of stories dried up and in its empty wake I discovered a cause worth investing a fervent energy: the well-being of our planet. With the cause came my relentless pursuit of a science degree. I left home and surprised and disappointed my parents by electing on registration day at the university to go into science rather than pursue a fine arts degree in advertizing. Although I wasn’t “expressing”, I was nevertheless inspired. I obtained several degrees in science, including one in Limnology (the study of freshwater), which were all to prove worthwhile in my ultimate “calling” and self-expression: that of making science accessible to the lay-public and eventually writing hard-science fiction stories and novels of substance about the environment. The latter didn’t happen for several years after I acquired my Masters of Science degree and did a long stint of teaching at university (yes, I DID teach after all!) while successfully publishing articles for magazines.
The End: Fulfillment
Nina outside Bakka Books in Toronto where her novel is for sale
My non-fiction pieces became my entrance into the world of fiction (much harder to break into) and I used this venue to polish my writing skills in fiction (don’t let anyone tell you that non-fiction can’t be exciting, bending to many of the same rules as in fiction writing). Once I began publishing fiction stories, I never looked back. And as far as I’m concerned, the sky’s the limit now.
Not too long ago, I quit my day job and moved across the country to an artistic community on the east coast. I am currently travelling the world and pursuing my dream as a full-time author and writing coach. It’s not an easy life. And it can be lonely at times. But it is so incredibly fulfilling and blessed with meaning.
Come, walk with me and pursue your dream. It’s for the taking.