Lisa Abeyta


    Age: 43

    Location:
    Albuquerque
    Relationship Status Married
    Children: Proud Parent
    Occupation: Freelance Writer
    Interested In: Fiction, Non Fiction, Children's, Other
    About Me: I'm a mother of three, and they are giving me gray hair. Not so much because they're not great, but because they have so much energy they wear me out. I've been married for 21 years and still have none of the answers when it comes to relationships, so don't ask.
    What I Write: I wrote my first book in the fourth grade, but my mom won't let me have it until she dies. Last I remember, it was about thirty notebook pages between burlap-covered cardboard with glued-on yarn spelling out the title: The Mystery of the Mud Monster.

    None of my editors want anything with burlap or cardboard now, but some of the assignments are just as fun. Some of my corporate work is not fun but pays well, so I hold my nose and type with one hand. And my fiction - ah, that is what I really love.
    Credits & Accomplishments: Credits, bylines, awards - they come and go. The thing I'm most proud of is being a role model for my kids to never be afraid to pursue their dream and keep on pursuing until it happens.
    Hobbies Who needs a hobby when you write all day? Ok, I love to garden, take my fraidy-cat dog on walks (where she hides behind me every time another dog passes by), and drinking coffee (why can't it be hobby?).
    Music: Everything from Mozart to The Fray.
    Favorite Movies: You've Got Mail - sorry, I love the sappy, happy love story
    What About Bob - makes me laugh even after thirty times
    The Emperor's New Groove - pure silliness but so much fun
    Dinner With Friends - four great actors in some seriously uncomfortable moments
    Favorite Television Shows: Grey's Anatomy, The Wire, The Shield, Spongebob Squarepants, Law & Order, Friends, Seinfeld, Burn Notice, Homicide, Brotherhood, Entourage, Samantha Who, Dancing With The Stars,
    Favorite Books & Authors: Oh, no way. Not picking.
    Heroes: My great grandma. She grew up in a wealthy home in Missouri but was disowned when she married a poor race horse trainer from New Mexico. She homesteaded a patch of land in the wide-open plains of Northwestern New Mexico, buried three babies and two more children during the flu epidemic, and raised five more to adulthood. She made time for me, taught me how to crochet used butter tubs into babydoll beds and braid bread sacks into rugs. But most of all she taught me that strength and kindness can go hand in hand.
    Schools: Wright State University, Fairborn, OH
    University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM
    Income From Writing: How I Make My Living
    Companies Writer's Market, Writer's Digest, New Mexico Magazine, Albuquerque the Magazine, Albuquerque Journal, Local Flavor, La Cocinita and on and on.
    Years Writing: 6 - 10 Years
    Website/Blog http://www.lisaabeyta.com
    NEW CLASS STARTING MAY 2009 at http://www.authorlink.com/...

    Turning Fiction Research Into Cash

    Friday, March 13, 2009, 09:10 AM MST [General]

    I don't know about you, but I have this large stack of research piled in a file cabinet drawer in my garage.  There are statistics on domestic violence, tidbits of this history of chocolate (talk about pleasure reading), and all sorts of odds and ends that I can't bear to throw away.  All of it was amassed at some point along my writing career - either for an assignment for a newspaper or magazine article or in the process of writing fiction, because we all know that even fiction needs to be factual for readers to buy into the story.

    So what to do with all of that research?  Why not turn it into another paying article instead of letting it gather dust bunnies in some forgotten corner?

    I am pleased to be able to offer a brand new online class through authorlink.com which will help writers do just this.  Whether you've always dreamed of seeing your name in print, have already started down that journey or have thought you were only good at fiction, my class is designed to help writers learn the steps they need to take to get paid for their nonfiction writing.

    So, dust off that old research or use your hobbies or day job skills to earn some extra cash.

    For informationon the course, click HERE.

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    Before You PItch Know Your Stuff

    Thursday, February 12, 2009, 04:06 AM MST [General]

    When I told my mom that I wanted a job, she never laughed at me and told me what a silly idea it was for an eight-year-old girl.  Instead, she opened the world of newspapers to me by suggesting that I sell Grit Magazine door to door in our small neighborhood which was then on the outskirts of Albuquerque.

    The newspaper was an important part of our family - almost as important as the Bible, but not quite.  Actually, not by a long shot, but it did often occupy the same real estate on my father's ottoman of a morning as he sipped his first cup of coffee.  After finding a bit of encouragement in the Good Book, he read the newspaper cover to cover.  And when he hurried off to work, it was my mother's turn to sit with the paper at the kitchen table.  So selling a small, monthly newspaper that had already been in production for almost a century seemed like the perfect first job to me.

    I remember my first time out on my route.  I knocked on the door of an elderly lady up the street and asked her if she'd like to buy the Grit Magazine in my wagon for only a quarter (already counting up the number of Tootsie Rolls I could buy with the ten cents profit I would make from her purchase).  But she stopped me cold.  

    "What's in the newspaper, young girl?"

    What was in it?  I didn't read it.  It was for old people.  I stammered and stuttered an answer.  "I don't really know."

    She gave me a hard look and barked, "Then you'd better learn your first lesson about selling anything.  If you want to get somebody else to buy what you're selling, then you'd best know what you're talking about.  You need to read that thing from cover to cover so you can get excited and tell me all about it so I want my own copy."

    And as she started to close the door, she left a parting shot of hope.  "Now you go home and read that magazine, young lady, and then come back.  When you can tell me why I should buy it, you come back and ring my door bell."

    I didn't try to sell any more newspapers that day.  Instead, I fought back the tears and swallowed hard all the way back down the street.  And then I grabbed one of the Grit newspapers off the top of the stack, found a nice shady spot under our tree, and started reading.  There were stories about a dog herding a flock of sheep past a bear and on to safety, growing the biggest heirloom tomatoes in your garden, and tidbits of history.  Personal essays found space alongside how-to articles.  And I was captivated by it all, devouring it that afternoon from cover to cover.

    The next day after school, I loaded up my wagon, and with renewed purpose marched up the driveway and rang the doorbell of the woman who had sent me home in tears.  She seemed a bit surprised I'd returned, and after I told her why she needed to buy one of my Grit Magazines, she tottered away from the door.  I watched her long, gnarled fingers struggle with her change purse and graciously accepted the proffered quarter held out to me.  I thanked her and hurried off to the next house.

    I sold my entire stack of magazines and ordered more for the next issue.  And when it came, I read it cover to cover before I left the house.  And sold out again.

    It was a valuable lesson I learned that day, one that has served me well many times since then.   She seemed like such a crank at the time, but I know now that the grouchy lady down the street was doing me a favor.  And I wish I could thank her, but I think the skip in my step as I walked down her driveway was probably all the thanks she needed to know she'd done the right thing.

     

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