Sunday, April 12, 2009
April 25th Meeting
April 11th Meeting
At this meeting we went over excerpts of short stories, a short humorous memoir, flash fiction, and many wonderful poems.
These are some of the things that were pointed out to me in the critique of my piece.
1. Have a hook early on the grab the reader (and agent’s attention)
2. Allow the reader to get to know your characters, what they want, what are the relationships between the main characters.
Last night I looked at the first few pages of books from my bookshelf. I had the advantage of having already read these, so I knew what happened in the story. I was able to see how the first few pages gave a sample of the characters and their relationships to each other and what was important to them.
The best example I came across was the novel Barefoot by Elin Hilderbrand. In the first few pages we are introduced to each of the four characters. It didn't reveal the conflict of the story, but it illustrated how each character generally acted and the descriptions of them revealed how each of them was dealing with their conflicts appeared to a stranger. One was worried, one sour and the other flighty and distracted.
What did you learn at the meeting or from some other source recently?A Writing Buddy
You can also learn how to develop your craft. I’m learning form my buddy how to pay more attention to writing and researching details. And that when you are working on a piece, you may have something significant that doesn’t fit into the story. Its okay to develop that as its own piece which is an advantage the fiction world has over real life.
And if you’re writing buddy is just putting out a lot of new work, it inspires you to keep up.
Do you have writing buddies or have you had any? How has this person influenced your writing?
Published Works by Members
http://bobesherman.com/
Description:
Am I the Only One That Signals is a collection of comic essays on a variety of subjects covering everything from Alpha to Zulu. As the title suggests, the author considers himself one of the few people in this world who uses his turn signals. However, the reader needs to keep in mind that this book is in no way intended to be a driving manual about how to change lanes properly.
Published Works by Members
Available at Books and Books
http://www.booksandbooks.com/NASApp/store/Product?s=showproduct&isbn=9781934248447
Description
When a desperate woman hires a private investigator, the secrets they discover about her birth force her to consider two shocking possibilities. Convinced she is a no one, with nothing, she suddenly finds her life is in peril. Set in a contemporary southwest rich in ethnic diversity, the story involves prejudice, fear of ridicule, the search for a missing person and elusive answers to controversial questions. The Eyes Have It takes the reader on a multi-faceted ride filled with historic reflections as it joins the age-old debate between believers and debunkers.
National Poetry Month
Check out these websites to learn about and read poetry:
http://www.poets.org/
http://www.nybooks.com/poetry-month/
Monday, April 6, 2009
New Link: Books and Books
If you know of any other events please feel free to post it to the group.
Cherrie
Writing Tools
If I am writing (as opposed to typing) I must use black uniball pens. I write with Microsoft Word. I don't handwrite often, because I found I rarely bothered to type my work. I have also found Microsoft OneNote a wonderful tool.
Its pretty much a binder on the computer. You have different sections separted by tabs and then pages under each tabbed section. You can save different "notebooks" which I find helpful for my different novel ideas or random thoughts. It automatically saves and you can copy and paste things from the internet and even audio clips. It probably does a lot more that I don't know about. I recommend it highly.
What do you like to use, share your favorites with the group.
Cherrie
April Meeting
We will be meeting on April 11, at the NMB Library from 2-4 pm. Please bring 5-10 copies of your work if you would like to get feedback.
See you then!
Cherrie