Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Researching writing markets

This looks a useful site from Mary Anne if your digging around for somewhere to publish your work.

www.duotrope.com

The theme calendar may even inspire a topic to write about.

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Differences

I was impressed by how differently some of us viewed the pieces from last night (the 28th of Nov) in suggesting what might be done to make things better. And yet, it seemed we all were able to accept those different viewpoints and move right along. I think we should give ourself a pat on the back. Or perhaps we only confused our fellow writers (one of whom had a midnight publication deadline.) What you say you, fellow writers?

I will look forward to seeing what Jeanne finally decided to post on her blog.

Mary Ann

Monday, November 19, 2007

Publish or Perish?

I was very impressed by anyone's tenacity to stick to the efforts of publishing something for ten years. Amazing. But this precedent should give us all courage.

I doubt that I would try to publish the piece I am working on. I envision it as being just for family.

Thanks for this information.

Mary Ann

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Publisher for you family history or memoir?

Checkout the December 2007 copy of The Writer - (I'm not sure if the library subscribes).
Page 14 has a breakthrough story about Betty Grant Henshaw, who wrote an account of growing up in the Oklahoma Hills during the Dust Bowl and Great Depression era.
At 60 years of age she decided to try her hand at writing, took writing classes, joined a writing group and wrote stories about her life.
Then, recognizing that they did not hang together, she drew up an outline (something she said that she should have done at the beginning) and created a book length novel. She spent the next 10 years attending writing conferences, talking to agents and sending out samples of her work, only to receive rejections.
The breakthrough came when a writer friend recognized that her work told the history of the era and suggested she submit it to a university press.

Texas Tech University presses jumped at the chance to publish her memoir and provided editing support and cover design. The book 'Children of the Dust: An Okie Family Story' is a finalist for the Oklahoma Book Award.
Publication through a university press could apply to any one of several works read in our group.

In a similar vain, page 30 has a six-page step-by-step article by Moira Allen on "How to Write a Family History", which includes interesting sidebars on the 'crazy-quilt memoir' (an alternative to the usual chronological approach), and using birthday letters and tales from the family newsletter as source material.

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Foreshadowing

I think of foreshadowing as similar to planting a clue or misdirection (red herring) in a mystery story – you don’t want to be to overt when you do it. Foreshadowing is the subtle positioning of information that usually serves two (or more) purposes.
The first purpose is to provide information relevant at the part of the story that is being told.
The second purpose is to explain something that happens later, for which an explanation at that point in the story would significantly disrupt it.

Here is a simple example from my Finger of Suspicion story.

Early on, I wrote "Kelly fingers, their nails chewed to the quick,”…

The first purpose was to tell the reader about Kelly – anxious, a nail biter, not in a position to be concerned with her looks.

This is then compared (though not specifically) with the long painted fingernails of the kidnapped heiress and finally revealed as the reason Kelly retains her digit (and perhaps her life).

Franklin explains foreshadowing on page 150 of ‘Writing for Story’ as “the technique by which the writer unobtrusively inserts details early in the story that will allow him [or her] to conduct his [or her] dramatic scenes without the necessity of explaining the background details.”

Franklin says that the principle was codified by Anton Chekov as Chekov’s Law, which specifies, “if the opening of a story mentions a shotgun hanging over the mantel, then that shotgun must be fired before the story ends.”

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

To flashforward or foreshadow?

At our last meeting, I said that flashforward (think of it as the opposite of flashback) is not the same as foreshadowing. I would like to expand on this using information from the book I also mentioned.

According to Jon Franklin in his book 'Writing for Story' "flashforward is a woebegotten technique that usually goes something like:

Joe chose to go to the prom with Alice instead of Sue. In the future that choice would come back again and again to haunt him. But now he was much more attracted to Ann."

Franklin says "the flashforward is most of all intrusive, because it has the effect of the writer's telling a secret, sotto voce, into the reader's ear. Like any other intrusion by the writer, the flashforward reminds the reader that the story is an illusion and thereby destroys the sense that the story is real."

He goes on to say that a professional writer may use flashforward perhaps three times in a lifetime and he suggest that as such editors and critics automatically assume the writer who uses flashforward is an amateur. If he wasn't he or she would have foreshadowed instead.

So if that's flashforward how does foreshadowing work, at least according to a Pulitzer prizewinner?

Of course it's more complicated, but I'll sort out some of Franklin's words and post again later.

Six invites sent out

I have sent out invites to:

Wes, Sarah, Anita, Rob, Mary Ann, and Amy. This is everyone at the meeting tonight, who has not already been invited and signed up.

Follow the instructions to be able to post on this site.

I will invite others after future meeting when they have agreed to receive an invite.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Writing can be such a tease

A jumble of books on the craft of writing competes for space on my crowded bookshelves. One book never finds a resting place there.

It is possibly the best book on writing non-fiction or fiction that I have ever read and has become a go to reference work due to its simplicity of structure and working examples.

I read it cover to cover and now dip in to it for specific topics.

The book makes use of two Pulitzer Prize-winning articles written by the author, who explains in detail every aspect of their construction and execution in easy to understand terms. The author also describes his process for focusing on the key points of the story and achieving a result with which the reader can resonate.

The appendixes contain a dissection of each article with no less than 292 annotations defining the reason or purpose of each word, phrase or thought in the articles.

The small paperback book is truly a remarkable aid to understanding the craft of writing for story.

Don’t forget to ask me for the title and author next Wednesday.


In case you missed the comment I posted, this is the name of the book

Writing for Story
Jon Franklin

More details at Amazon - reviews are "wow this is great" to "anyone who needs this must be a bad writer".

Guess I know where I stand.

Thursday, November 1, 2007

Writer & Reader

I find it very hard to write in a way that preserves my sense of my own voice and yet at the same time speaks to the reader. A long time ago I used to write a column in an educational journal on Math and Logo. My "mission" was open–inquiry, setting up situations where students could discover patterns, make hypotheses and then test them to see if they were correct. I was one of three columnists, so mine only appeared every third month. The other two entries were much more prosaic - I thought they often represented all that was wrong with typical math teaching. However, looking back, I think by being true to myself, I was not talking to the readers, and I don't think many, if any, teachers used my ideas in their classrooms. Letters to the editor indicated that teachers did use some of the other columnists' ideas.

In writing my short story, Delinquency, I see some of the same pattern. In the draft I read at the Write Stuff meeting it was a 4th draft), I was focused on the telling of the story. The feedback from the meeting has made me think a lot more about listening to the story - what does the reader hear? There was also positive feedback about the voice of the narrator, except a couple of places where it broke down. Both are necessary: what is important to me, and how do I get the reader to visualize or live that importance so it becomes a shared experience.

And then you publish in one way or another, and you relinquish all rights to the meaning of what you have written, as each reader reads into it his or her own interpretation, often ones unanticipated.

Tim

p.s. As is so often true, writing this has been very helpful. A note turned into something much longer.

Friday, October 26, 2007

Pushing blog posts

Anita said that to be useful, the blog would have to push posts out, rather than the user having to log-in to see if there is anything new. I agree.

There are a few ways of doing this, depending on your choice of browser and personal preference.

I have added two ways to receive pushed posts

Via your browser:
  • If you use Firefox, then clicking on the small orange square (with a dot and 2 circle quadrants) will add a feed to your bookmarks. Each time a new Post is made, the title of the Post is fed automatically to your favorites list. Clicking on the blog title in your drop-down favorites list will display all post titles, without having to go to the Lincoln Write Stuff blog site. This works almost identically for Windows explorer (at least from IE 5 onwards). I don't know how the Mac handles this - but I suspect it is superior.

By your email:
  • I have added an email subscription facility provided by Feedburner (now a part of Google). Simply click the link on the left hand side of the blog page that says Subscribe to blog and fill in your email address on the page provided. Verify your subscription when you get an email from Feedburner and you will receive one email per day of all posts made on that day. If there are no Posts then there will be no email.
I hope this helps users get the most out of our group.

Let me know if anything else is missing.

Aha!

Neil, in the top right hand corner of the page when you're on the blog, right next to your email address, is "New Post". Click on it and let fly! (Also--sign your post before you preview it. I couldn't find a way to get back to it and re-edit, as I can with the Writers Plot blog.) Jeanne

An experiment in labels

Tim asked the other night if we could arrange Posts in folders?
As far as I know this is not possible. Posts are archived by dates. However searching can be made simpler by adding labels for Posts. In this way Posts can then be searched or sorted by these labels (sometimes called tags by other blog software).
So what is a label?
Simply put it is a one word descriptor that describes the category that the Post fits in (think of it like a folder name).
This post might be labeled instructions. A Post can have more than one label, but then it will turn up under searches or sorts for each label.

I suggest the following labels for this blog:

  • grammar - for posts on grammar (e.g. sneaked v snuck)
  • craft - for posts on plotting or outlining, dialogue, descriptions, character development (e.g. are dead dogs ok)
  • tools - for software, computing problems, hints or tips (Mac v PC, word v rtf, etc)
  • non-fiction - for posts on journalism, essays, memoir (e.g. voice, flashback and truth)
Feel free to suggest others, but remember too many will get confusing and unwieldy.

You will find the box to add Labels for this post at the bottom left of the input page on each new post.

The other thing to remember is to use short meaningful titles for the original post, so that there is a chance of guessing the likely content.

Comments are kept with Posts, so make sure the comment is relevant to the topic posted and try to keep each post to one topic.

One final thought. On the top right hand side you will see a search blog. This will find the post(s) that contain that key word searched on.


Geoff

Thursday, October 25, 2007

First Post

I had one glitch in signing up to post - I have my computer remember my gmail password, which means I didn't remember it. However, I took a best guess, and it was right (but I won't tell you what it was).

I look forward to more informative posting than the above.
Tim

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Invitation to commenters

I would like to conduct a pipe cleaning exercise by inviting those who posted comments to post a blog. I have sent out invitations to you to sign up as authors
You could blog about how easy (or difficult) it was to sign up and post or blog on a writing topic.
At least one person already has a Gmail account, two others do not - so that should result in a fair test.
If all works well I will send out invitations to others on our distribution list.

See you all Wednesday for our discussion.

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Fellow Writers

Lend me your thoughts.

I set up this blog in the euphoric haze that followed the public reading on Wednesday 17 October 2007 caused I think by fudge brownie overload, strong cheese and a glass (or two) of red wine at home (afterwards I might add).

I would like to thank everyone who came, listened and applauded, Jeanne for organizing it and standing in for Neil (some work is required on the accent Jeanne) and those who provided the facilities and refreshments.

Perhaps most of all I would like to thank my fellow writers whose comments and input beat my piece into shape.

I applaud you all.

Now that you have perhaps read this blog, please feel free to comment.(click on the word comments)

We can add members to to this blog and thus create a team blog, but each of you will need to create a Google account to add new entries to the Lincoln Write Stuff blog.

This is a simple process and begins with the administrator (aka me) sending an invitation to your email address. (I won't do this until we have had our discussion, in case we decide not to pursue a group blog).

When you reply you will be taken to a Google page to create an account and have full access to add posts.

Once everyone is a member we can restrict viewing access to members only, but for now I have left it open to the public to enable you to comment.