tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-55907806521984140652024-03-16T03:08:48.925-04:00Alex Myers WritingAlexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.comBlogger93125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-39328174433420847792013-12-24T12:06:00.001-05:002013-12-24T12:06:29.311-05:00NEW WEBSITE!<span style="color: purple; font-size: large;"><b>Please check out my new website:</b></span><br />
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<span style="color: purple; font-size: large;"><b><a href="http://alexmyerswriting.com/">Alexmyerswriting.com</a></b></span><br />
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<span style="color: purple; font-size: large;"><b>All updates and information will be made to the new site and not to this blog!</b></span>Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-68720767485859467742013-12-17T08:43:00.001-05:002013-12-17T08:43:37.343-05:00A Few Thoughts on EditingAs I read through my recently published story, "Swallowed," (<a href="http://gulfstreamlitmag.com/current-issue/fiction/swallowed/">Here</a>, in case you want to check it out.) I got to thinking about how I had edited and revised it, and I figured it would make for a good blog post with some practical craft and writing advice.<div>
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In its current ("final" I would say, but what writing is final? Perhaps "published" is the best term...) incarnation, "Swallowed" is 5500 words. A medium length short story. In the version that I initially sent out to Gulf Stream (et al.) it was 9000 words. A long short story. A couple of places rejected it with a note saying: its good, but too long. Gulf Stream took the time to say: we like it, we want it if you can make it shorter (by ten pages).</div>
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So, I began to hack.</div>
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At first, cutting off just under half of a story feels a little daunting. Okay, a lot daunting. But, in some ways, getting rid of thousands of words is easier than getting rid of a hundred. You can't tell yourself -- I'll just trim back on adjectives. No. You've got to get in there with a machete (and then follow up with a pruning shear). </div>
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So, off I went. The editors had been kind and suggested I cut the start. This is almost always where to go when you need to cut something. Get rid of the runway and let the story takeoff sooner. That was two thousand words gone. </div>
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For the rest, I looked at places where the main character went off on tangents or told about his backstory. This was much harder for me to cut. As I took out passages, I kept wavering, thinking: this is good character development... or, this funny! </div>
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Maybe it was. Maybe it wasn't. The bottom line was that the story was too long. Something (lots of somethings) had to go. I didn't let myself read through the piece until I'd finished making the cuts down to the page limit they had set. I cut (almost) everything that wasn't related to the forward motion of the plot: getting my character on his journey as soon as possible and then not letting him pause.</div>
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Then, when I'd gotten down to the page limit they suggested, I saved it, turned the computer off, and let it sit for a few days. I worked on other stuff. I tried to forget it. Then I went back to "Swallowed" and read it through without letting myself change anything (okay, except for typos). It was coherent. It was faster. It was, perhaps, better. But the truth is: I missed a lot of what I cut... </div>
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Deep breath. Cutting your writing is hard. But here's what I told myself as I made those final edits and sent it back to Gulf Stream: I'm the only one who knows what's missing. No one else will say - hey what happened to that awesome joke on page 3? Maybe that's the author's burden, to know all the orphans and might-have-beens and close-calls and nearly-made-its in the piece. </div>
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What I'm offering is a piece of advice that I often give to my students (and need to take to heart myself). If a piece is good, it will probably be better if it is shorter. Almost every story has some slack in it. And even a little bit of slack can kill a good story. Set a challenge: trim a thousand words. Cut a story in half, length-wise. Make that your writing project of the day. It almost always makes it better.</div>
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Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-64622582922653422702013-12-16T09:49:00.004-05:002013-12-16T09:49:33.299-05:00Author Video is PostedAmong the many awesome things that Simon & Schuster does for its authors is put together an author video... it's meant to introduce the novel as well as explain some of the connections between my life and the novel and the process of writing, too. <br />
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So... here's the link to check it out: <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=acrSLWKsM7Y">Author Video</a>Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-3000710984293822662013-12-10T09:27:00.003-05:002013-12-10T09:27:43.429-05:00Peter Gizzi on Writing ImplementsLast night I had the pleasure of attending a reading in honor of Emily Dickinson's Birthday -- it was at the beautiful Folger Theater. Peter Gizzi read his own work as well as Dickinson's. It made me realize that though I have often read her verses, I have seldom heard them read, and it makes a tremendous difference. Poetry was meant to be heard.<br />
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Out of all the erudite comments that Gizzi made about Dickinson, about poetry in general, and about writing broadly, I most enjoyed an off-hand comment he made. The topic at hand was Dickinson's habit of writing on scrap paper (envelopes, receipts, etc) in pencil. Gizzi said of his own composition process: "The pencil is my drug of choice."<br />
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I love it. Not only another hand-writing writer, but also the idea that the writing itself, the mechanical process of it, is somehow drug-like. In a good way. It is intoxicating and overwhelming and out of body. True even if you use a pen.Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-33099224885629699712013-12-07T12:57:00.001-05:002013-12-07T12:57:22.571-05:00Short Story in Gulf Stream Lit MagCheck out my short story, "Swallowed," in the current issue of Gulf Stream Lit Mag. The journal is full of awesome pieces! Mine is a retelling of the Book of Jonah. I've always thought that Jonah was one of the funniest books in the Bible, but the humor often gets lost in translation. So this is my attempt to correct that!<br />
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<a href="http://gulfstreamlitmag.com/current-issue/fiction/swallowed/">http://gulfstreamlitmag.com/current-issue/fiction/swallowed/</a>Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-21162553536102645392013-12-02T19:17:00.000-05:002013-12-02T19:17:01.531-05:00Your Favorite Lines<span style="font-family: Georgia, Times New Roman, serif;">In a recent class, we were reading Coleridge's "Frost at Midnight," and comparing the two endings of the poems. The original ending read as follows: </span><br />
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<dd style="background-color: white; font-size: 13px; line-height: 19.1875px; margin-bottom: 0.1em; margin-left: 1.6em; margin-right: 0px;"><span style="font-family: Georgia, Times New Roman, serif;">Or whether the secret ministry of cold</span></dd><dd style="background-color: white; font-size: 13px; line-height: 19.1875px; margin-bottom: 0.1em; margin-left: 1.6em; margin-right: 0px;"><span style="font-family: Georgia, Times New Roman, serif;">Shall hang them up in silent icicles,</span></dd><dd style="background-color: white; font-size: 13px; line-height: 19.1875px; margin-bottom: 0.1em; margin-left: 1.6em; margin-right: 0px;"><span style="font-family: Georgia, Times New Roman, serif;">Quietly shining to the quiet moon,</span></dd><dd style="background-color: white; font-size: 13px; line-height: 19.1875px; margin-bottom: 0.1em; margin-left: 1.6em; margin-right: 0px;"><span style="font-family: Georgia, Times New Roman, serif;">Like those, my babe! which ere tomorrow's warmth</span></dd><dd style="background-color: white; font-size: 13px; line-height: 19.1875px; margin-bottom: 0.1em; margin-left: 1.6em; margin-right: 0px;"><span style="font-family: Georgia, Times New Roman, serif;">Have capp'd their sharp keen points with pendulous drops,</span></dd><dd style="background-color: white; font-size: 13px; line-height: 19.1875px; margin-bottom: 0.1em; margin-left: 1.6em; margin-right: 0px;"><span style="font-family: Georgia, Times New Roman, serif;">Will catch thine eye, and with their novelty</span></dd><dd style="background-color: white; font-size: 13px; line-height: 19.1875px; margin-bottom: 0.1em; margin-left: 1.6em; margin-right: 0px;"><span style="font-family: Georgia, Times New Roman, serif;">Suspend thy little soul; then make thee shout,</span></dd><dd style="background-color: white; font-size: 13px; line-height: 19.1875px; margin-bottom: 0.1em; margin-left: 1.6em; margin-right: 0px;"><span style="font-family: Georgia, Times New Roman, serif;">And stretch and flutter from thy mother's arms</span></dd><dd style="background-color: white; font-size: 13px; line-height: 19.1875px; margin-bottom: 0.1em; margin-left: 1.6em; margin-right: 0px;"><span style="font-family: Georgia, Times New Roman, serif;">As thou wouldst fly for very eagerness.</span></dd><span style="font-family: Georgia, Times New Roman, serif;"><br /></span>
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<span style="font-family: Georgia, Times New Roman, serif;">Coleridge, in revising, cut everything after "quiet moon." We discussed the revision and why he had made it (settling on a resonance created with the reiteration of the "secret ministry" that begins the poem), but agreed that the original final lines were lovely (for many reasons). At this, the professor said: yes, they are. But it is often the case that one must cut one's best lines.</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: Georgia, Times New Roman, serif;">His words reminded me of advice I had received (and since forgotten) in my MFA program: if you find yourself attached to a line -- remarking to yourself on how much you like it, keeping it in, draft after draft, even as other things change -- then it is probably a line you should cut. </span><br />
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<span style="font-family: Georgia, Times New Roman, serif;">Now, I'm sure there are exceptions to this rule, but in general, I've found it to be a pretty good one. And since remembering it, I've gone back over a few drafts of works in progress and made myself stop at every line that I really like and challenge myself: am I keeping it because I like it or because it is what the story/essay needs at this moment. Generally, I'm keeping it because I like it, not because it is "right." (This is, for me, particularly true of metaphors. I come up with some comparison in my mind that just works and I don't want to change it, even when other readers point out that it doesn't work for anyone else.)</span><br />
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<span style="font-family: Georgia, Times New Roman, serif;">I hope that others find this writing tip useful. If nothing else, it is yet another way to dive into a draft that you're almost done with a pay some close attention to language.</span><br />
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Here's their page: <a href="http://heavyfeatherreview.com/2013/11/25/our-pushcart-nods-are-in/">http://heavyfeatherreview.com/2013/11/25/our-pushcart-nods-are-in/</a>Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-47789784442185209722013-11-19T08:02:00.001-05:002013-11-19T08:02:18.636-05:00Galley Giveaway - Enter to Get Revolutionary for Free!If you'd like a chance to read<i> Revolutionary</i> before it is released... and not have to pay for it... you have a couple of days left to enter the Goodreads Galley Giveaway.<br />
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Check it out here <a href="https://www.goodreads.com/giveaway/show/71331-revolutionary">ENTER</a><br />
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<br />Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-80445318026584145662013-10-31T19:25:00.002-04:002013-10-31T19:25:58.100-04:00Joan of Arc... and Deborah Samson Joan of Arc is a name that comes up often when I mention the novel I've written on Deborah Samson, and, indeed, the connection is a logical one: women dressed as men, going in to battle. <div>
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Just as in earlier posts I took a look at the Molly Pitcher legend in comparison to Deborah Samson's battlefield experience, I'd like to compare Joan of Arc, the Maid of Orleans, to Deborah and see what can be gleaned about women dressing as men, about women on the battlefield, about society's attitudes towards martial women and towards the "masquerade" of cross-dressing. (Meaning that these were prolonged instances of disguise.)</div>
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To start this topic off, I'd like to justify the comparison. Placing the two in conversation is not an invention of my own mind. In fact, it is quite likely that this is a comparison that Deborah herself would have made.</div>
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Piece of Evidence #1: Early in the war, when the American forces were in disarray, Thomas Paine wrote in <i>The American Crisis </i>that just as Joan of Arc had "<span style="background-color: white; font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 13px;">driven back like men petrified with fear" "the whole English army," thus now America needed "</span><span style="background-color: white; font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 13px;">some Jersey maid to spirit up her countrymen, and save her fair fellow sufferers." It is likely, though not certain, that Deborah would have seen <i>The American Crisis. </i>Her hometown of Middleborough was a politically astute and involved place, a crossroads of commerce, and the pamphlets (and discussions about those pamphlets) were likely present. </span></div>
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<span style="background-color: white; font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 13px;">Piece of Evidence #2: Deborah was a voracious reader as a young woman. We don't have a record of the books that she read, but we do have evidence of what was popular and readily available at the time. These included chapbooks mostly featuring tales of adventure. One prominent and popular such book was <i>The Maid of Orleans</i>, about Joan of Arc.</span></div>
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<span style="background-color: white; font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 13px;">So, admittedly, this is tenuous evidence and supposition. But at least it is possible -- well within the realm of the believable -- that Deborah had heard of Joan of Arc and thought of Joan of Arc in the context of the Revolutionary War. </span></div>
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<span style="font-family: arial, sans-serif;"><span style="font-size: 12.727272033691406px;">It would be too simple to say that Deborah might have read Paine's pamphlet and regarded it as a call to arms, as an invitation to be that Joan of Arc. For though Paine's language, as I quoted it above, does suggest that, reading the passage in full reveals the sort of misogynistic frame that infiltrated all levels of discourse at the time. Here's the full quote:</span></span></div>
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<span style="font-family: arial, sans-serif;"><span style="font-size: 12.727272033691406px;">"I</span></span><span style="background-color: white; font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 13px;">n the fourteenth [fifteenth] century the whole English army, after ravaging the kingdom of France, was driven back like men petrified with fear; and this brave exploit was performed by a few broken forces collected and headed by a woman, Joan of Arc. Would that heaven might inspire some Jersey maid to spirit up her countrymen, and save her fair fellow sufferers from ravage and ravishment!"</span></div>
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<span style="background-color: white; font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 13px;">The tone of the first line is to suggest that the English defeat is all the more humiliating and outrageous because it was at the hands of a woman. The line does not suggest that Joan, being a woman, is all the more heroic. In the second sentence, notice the diction "spirit up" (like a cheerleader) and "fair fellow sufferers" -- fair might suggest a reference to other women and not to men; sufferers also makes this group passive. This reading is strengthened by the phrase "ravage and ravishment" -- again, crimes that women, not men, are likely to suffer. </span></div>
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<span style="background-color: white; font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 13px;">This is not to undermine my piece of evidence: Deborah might well have heard mention of Joan in the context of the Revolutionary War. Moreover, given that she is a product of her own time, the language and bias of Paine might not have rankled her as it rankles me. Where I see diminishment (Spirit Up! They were beaten by a girl!), Deborah and other women might have felt encouragement; Paine is, after all, suggesting they can do something.</span></div>
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<span style="background-color: white; font-family: arial, sans-serif; font-size: 13px;">Moving on from this basis, I'll take a look at more specifics of Joan's adventures and reception in comparison to Deborah's.</span></div>
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Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-65863731808601341452013-10-24T14:15:00.002-04:002013-10-24T14:16:24.875-04:00Interview in the Philadelphia Gay NewsI am delighted to share with folks... my interview with The Philadelphia Gay News!<br />
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Such a delightful and generous piece on the novel and me. I hope you enjoy -- here's the link:<br />
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<a href="http://www.epgn.com/view/full_story/23908015/article-Trans-author-brings-female-Revolutionary-fighter-to-life?">PGN Interview</a>Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-4258386465685990992013-10-21T19:13:00.001-04:002013-10-21T19:13:03.156-04:00Okay, I know, a Cat Post...I hesitate to write this blog post because I am aware of the stereotypes regarding writers and their cats... but I'm plunging ahead anyway for two reasons.<br />
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<li>Recently, I was sent a copy of <i>Revolutionary's</i> jacket with the cover copy and the cats are mentioned in my author bio. In short, they're legit.</li>
<li>I really do believe in the message of this post and how it affects my (writing) life.</li>
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So here goes. Our apartment building has begun an HVAC renovation, which means that every weekday the apartment must be ready for workmen to enter each room at 9am and stay until 5pm. Hence, no furniture within six feet of certain walls, cardboard taped to the floor to prevent gouging, and (most importantly) the cats locked up in the bathroom.<br />
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Every morning, therefore, I set the bathroom up for them -- fuzzy pet cups to sleep in, a litter box, water, and food. Then I go and write, leaving the cats to roam freely until I hear the workmen in the hall.<br />
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Now, just for entertainment, here are pictures of the two of them, hopefully capturing their personalities.<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgoBTaGXZv4xKuwaBM8xQObKsJ-AOOAl0pS9oi8MKes76cb3swyjpqs5VnjeGKFCSO6XjeHPGwrmJevDuPPk5t3E6GXK5EJKPhYmWpKHV8OJMeQnPR4YMd44NHp6-hSBOIHK926f637RLSd/s1600/MagicInABag500.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="240" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgoBTaGXZv4xKuwaBM8xQObKsJ-AOOAl0pS9oi8MKes76cb3swyjpqs5VnjeGKFCSO6XjeHPGwrmJevDuPPk5t3E6GXK5EJKPhYmWpKHV8OJMeQnPR4YMd44NHp6-hSBOIHK926f637RLSd/s320/MagicInABag500.jpg" width="320" /></a></div>
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The one above is Magic. Sometimes spelled Magick. But never Magique.</div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjI1FQqeqy__rTTNIf8oFvTMqfA1RciPnukjjKMlfYYubGQB9b6J1l86tT5BbwJhNVBfkhBSXlZmnr2VMt3Z0d4pWPx6Ga1ffB4QESFt8Bkho3smzS19ObSZShvFxapGeMUncPsanGNVdMU/s1600/ZenSoda500.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="240" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjI1FQqeqy__rTTNIf8oFvTMqfA1RciPnukjjKMlfYYubGQB9b6J1l86tT5BbwJhNVBfkhBSXlZmnr2VMt3Z0d4pWPx6Ga1ffB4QESFt8Bkho3smzS19ObSZShvFxapGeMUncPsanGNVdMU/s320/ZenSoda500.jpg" width="320" /></a></div>
And this one is Soda. They're both sixteen. <br />
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Every morning, as soon as I set up the bathroom for them, Soda saunters past, jumps on the bed, and promptly falls asleep on her favorite blanket. Magic, on the other hand, prowls and paces for the hour until I lock them up. Both of them know what's coming... neither one of them enjoys being sequestered in the bathroom, but one of them lets the future (the unavoidable, inevitable imprisonment) wreck the last hour of freedom she has and the other one just does her thing.<br />
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Perhaps this is a lesson that resonates with me because of the rather looming event in my future (i.e. publication of my debut novel) but even without any large or impending (positive or negative) occurrence on the horizon, I think these cats give a fair reminder. And it's not the lesson that I've often heard (and dislike hearing) about why pets are great... this is not a case of "ignorance is bliss." Soda knows darn well what's going to happen: she just doesn't let it affect her routine.Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-7824860451833788832013-09-29T19:02:00.002-04:002013-09-29T19:02:39.130-04:00Samson or Sampson? What's in a name...As the days (okay, still months...) tick down towards publication of <i>Revolutionary</i> (January, folks!) all the final details are getting extra attention. Many of these points are trivial enough not to deserve expansive description, but one task came across my plate this week that is worth getting into.<br />
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Namely (pun!), the question of how to spell Deborah's maiden name. In my novel, I chose to spell it Samson. Most sources list it as Sampson. Thus, it might be easy to assume that I made a mistake in my spelling, but really it is a deliberate choice.<br />
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I find it fascinating that no signature of Deborah's exists prior to the war -- there is nowhere a place where she penned her own name (Samson or Sampson). We have, of course, her signature as Robert Shurtliff (which is variously spelled Shurtlieff and Shurtleff -- there are both variant spellings as well as hard to read penmanship). We have her signature as Deborah Gannett. But no indication of how she spelled her maiden name.<br />
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After the war, there is no question that others spelled it Sampson and did so prominently. Here, for instance, is the frontispiece of the "memoir" written by Herman Mann (with whom she collaborated closely) <a href="http://www.masshist.org/database/viewer.php?item_id=327&mode=small&img_step=1&">Mann Text</a> that has her named spelled "Sampson." <br />
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But before the war, Baptist records (Deborah converted, or was "received" as a Baptist in 1780) mark her as "Samson" and then, two years later, when she was excommunicated, list her as "Sampson." Even further back, all family records indicate that her father and her father's ancestors spelled it "Samson." (I am indebted, as with many facts about Deborah, to Alfred Young.) It was for this reason -- the clear family and historical precedent -- that I chose to spell her name "Samson."<br />
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My selection aside, the point I wanted to make here is one about the historical period (and history in general). First, there is the variation in spelling (and my study of letters and journals of Revolutionary War soldiers bears this out) -- as long as it sounded right, the spelling didn't seem to matter much. Second, there's the lack of documentation and "official" status to identity. Deborah was Samson or Sampson; she was Robert Shurtliff or Shurleff or Shurtlieff. No licenses, no passports, no papers. Just say-so. Just here-I-am. And third, the idea that one's material self disappears. That she lived in a time when she would right her own name so infrequently and on substance so ephemeral that it doesn't remain, except when others wrote it. <br />
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Identity and how we forge our own expressions of ourselves lies at the core of <i>Revolutionary. </i>This minor (what <u>does</u> spelling matter?) factor is just one more way to consider how different the presentation and recording of self was back in the 1780s.Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-30451015819444465382013-09-20T09:45:00.002-04:002013-09-20T09:45:45.433-04:00The Source? The Muse?My reading for grad school has me immersed in poetry -- not just the end product, but the process as well. (I will pause here to say what a true delight it is to be a student again and have the luxury of exploration and patient study.) This week brought not only a visit from Mark Doty and a simply exquisite reading of his new work, but also reading and discussion of Marina Tsvetaeva's poetry (and some of her prose as well).<br />
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In all the wonderful lines that I read, what struck me most was Tsvetaeva's wrestling with the question of what a poet is (and, relatedly, where poetry/poems come from). The formulation that seemed most fitting: "A poet is answer." In explaining what this answer is -- where the response comes from, she elaborates: "it always existed, only hadn't yet reached time; thus the opposite shore has not yet reached the ferry."<br />
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That final image struck me as wonderful metaphor for the writing process. Are we reaching towards a fixed goal (the far shore)? Does our writing, like the steady oar or paddle or motor, gain us, inch-by-inch, progress towards a destination? Tsvetaeva's formulation both suggests that and resists it: there is a fixed goal (the shore) but then she gives it motion. Is the motion an illusion?<br />
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I think this is where the idea of inspiration or the muse comes in. Even if the shore's motion is an illusion, it is one that prompts creativity, that suggests possibility. We write towards the poem, and the poem seems to be written towards us; that perception leads to new synergy. I like this. We are our own muses. The process of writing begets inspiration.Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-1335351286448245082013-09-08T19:12:00.002-04:002013-09-08T19:13:00.209-04:00Points of OriginHaving just put aside a novel draft, I'm taking a "break" and reworking some creative non-fiction essays. Perhaps it is this endeavor that made me so attuned to the radio commentary I heard this morning, the excellent broadcast of "On Being" that featured Nadia Bolz-Weber. (Here's the <a href="http://www.onbeing.org/program/nadia-bolz-weber-on-seeing-the-underside-and-seeing-god-tattoos-tradition-and-grace/5896/audio?embed=1">interview</a> if you want to listen.)<br />
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Among the many great comments (on many great subjects) made, this one stood out to me (here in paraphrase): I write from scars and not wounds. In other words, when trying to get down on paper something that is authentic, something that caused trauma, it is important to leave enough space and time to get to a place where the writing can be done productively (and without generating more injury).<br />
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A few years back, I was lucky enough to take a creative non-fiction workshop with Connie May Fowler and Sue William Silverman. Connie's mantra (echoed and augmented by Sue) was: Write from the hurt place.<br />
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I like the combination of these two pieces of advice. To Connie's point, you do have to write from the place where the hurt occurred (and perhaps where it still resonates). But to Bolz-Weber's claim: there is no merit (and possibly some danger) to writing to a hurt that hasn't healed.<br />
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The language here might sound extreme. And I wouldn't want to suggest that creative non-fiction writing is all about trauma. In fact, the broader concept of these maxims is about perspective. You have to have the proper distance (scar) and you have to have the proper mindset (hurt). The second point might be more twitchy... it isn't about pain, but about emotional truth. You have to have something to say - some feeling to evoke and you have to be willing to reside in that feeling. (That is, things don't just happen. A piece of writing/story/essay/memoir/etc. isn't just a string of events.)<br />
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Both of these pieces of advice apply equally, I think, to fiction as to creative non-fiction. I would call them the values of reflection (scar) and resonance (hurt). For me, at this moment and stage of composition, I found these to be words of wisdom, a reminder not to rush into a piece and not to overlook the important of an emotional center. Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-49545577550639013772013-08-25T10:23:00.003-04:002013-08-25T10:24:19.991-04:00Your Brain on WritingI love it when I get a nice staticky point of contact between my professional (teaching) life and my personal writing practice. I know there are many writers who feel that the teaching of writing can drain them of the energy for their own composition, but for me, it often supplies a little bubble of energy or insight.<br />
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This week, I found myself talking with folks (students, friends, and writers) who were struggling with the process of getting things on paper. Not the classic writer's block, not the sense of "I have nothing to say," but the feeling that it wasn't worth putting words on the page because those weren't the perfect words.</div>
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My first encounter with this concept was in college, when I got to know a student down the hall. He wrote beautifully. Exquisitely. His 2-3 page response papers were gorgeous. But he hated them. And he also took hours and hours and hours to generate them. We got to be good friends, and often studied in the same room. Let me describe our processes: see if you recognize yourself in them.</div>
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Imagine a paper due the next day. Here's my desk: books and class notes out. On top of them, a clean sheet of paper that I'm gradually filling with an outline. Next to this, square in front of me, my computer. I look at the outline, I type a few sentences -- maybe I reach over and grab a book and reread a passage. Go back to the computer, change a few things, write a few more sentences. And so on. In two hours' time, I print out a copy, take a walk, and then come back to revise. At my friend's desk, he's got his computer in front of him, his head in his hands (two fistfuls of hair, usually) and he's staring at the cursor, which is blinking in the middle of a lovely sentence. </div>
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These were analytical papers, but the same holds true for fiction or creative non-fiction composition. This isn't about habit or writing practice, I believe, so much as it is about how one understands writing itself. A process, yes, I hope we all know that. But not a linear process. One doesn't begin at A (concept/idea/thought) and proceed sequentially to Z (published product). It loops back, again and again. And not just through a procession of drafts, but also because you read and think and write and talk with a friend and then rewrite, and then discover you need to read some more... and so on. </div>
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My friend (and many of my colleagues and students) get stuck because they believe that before committing anything to paper, it must first be "right" or "good." Even if they know they will revise, they won't set a word on a page unless the piece/idea is fully conceived of. For them, thought precedes writing. For me, writing is thought. The idea doesn't fully exist until I have written it. The process of writing and the process of understanding are simultaneous for me.</div>
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Is it possible to begin writing too soon? to compose when you don't understand something enough to write on it? Of course. The reading and research and thinking need to happen beforehand... but the idea -- whatever it is -- doesn't exist until the words are on the page. At least that's what I believe... I welcome your comments!</div>
Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-25156429118045380572013-08-19T16:27:00.000-04:002013-08-19T16:27:08.596-04:00The First Review!I've heard from other writers that it is best to avoid reading reviews of your work... but when I got an email from Simon & Schuster saying that Publishers' Weekly had put out a review of <i>Revolutionary, </i>I had to read it.<br />
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Perhaps I will regret reading other reviews, but I was glad to see this one! It is one more step on the path of making this novel seem real. And making it seem like it soon be out. Very exciting.<br />
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Here is a link to the review: <a href="http://publishersweekly.com/978-1-4516-6332-7">http://publishersweekly.com/978-1-4516-6332-7</a>Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-41689648417426962472013-08-13T13:27:00.001-04:002013-08-13T13:27:26.939-04:00Understanding Your Characters...This post is tailored specifically to those who are developing characters in historical fiction, but is, I believe, applicable to the craft of understanding your characters in general. It also builds on some previous posts I have done about women in the revolutionary war.<br />
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You can read the earlier posts (I hope you do!) about Molly Pitcher(s) and their role not only during the war (camp followers) but after the war (loyal wives, in-the-moment-soldiers). Given how these women are celebrated, as I noted earlier, it is not surprising that Deborah Sampson was given little attention for many decades: she didn't fit neatly into the women-who-followed-her-husband-into-combat mold that felt "safe" to 19th century readers and writers. <br />
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When I began the research for my first novel, <i>Revolutionary</i>, I wanted to look at as wide a range of sources as I could on Deborah. The earliest material is filtered through her biographer, Herman Mann and the later material is filtered through the biases and predispositions of the era in which they were written. <br />
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So here's the first part of the craft lesson for writers of historical fiction: make sure you look at your "real life" characters not just from one historical vantage point. Get the fullest picture of them that you can by considering how they were written about by their contemporaries, by their children, by their friends, by their rivals, and by later writers. It is poor history (and poor historical fiction) to rely only on one source or from sources all from the same era (even if it is "eye-witness").<br />
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For Deborah, two visual images will suffice to prove my point. Here they are:<br />
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Both are early-mid 19th century depictions of Deborah Sampson that accompanied pamphlets or short writings on her. In both she is in uniform and with a weapon (or two!). But, as those who read the earlier blogposts might note... she is also posed near a cannon. It is not impossible that Deborah might have been near cannons in her service. Certainly, she was at sites that would have had them. But it is quite hard to argue that she used cannons at all. Cannons were for pitched battle and Deborah was involved in small skirmishes only. (Granted, she did claim to have been at Yorktown, or Mann placed her there, or both, but this is not true.) <br />
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So, when I was researching her character, I asked myself: why is she depicted this way? What is being said about her? I believe that both artists are making a subtle nod to the Molly Pitcher(s) legends. By putting Deborah near a cannon, they are indicating to the viewer that this is a woman on the battlefield. It is somewhat comforting -- suggesting that she served in the familiar and acceptable manner -- to have her depicted thus. Much more comforting than Deborah just waving a sword or holding a gun, I'd argue.<br />
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To leave my particular case and look at craft in general, what I'd suggest is this. Read (and look) widely as you explore your historical character. Chip away at bias. Consider how your character has shifted and been reinvented over the course of history. And then...<br />
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Take good stock of how you wish to depict your character. Realize that you are situated on this continuum that you have just explored. Your depiction will be no less biased, no less a product of your own time and expectations (and this, I would argue is true for fictional characters that aren't historical) than any other. It is better to be upfront and aware of your bias though.<br />
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In my own case, I knew that being transgender, I would come to Deborah's story from a particular angle. Likewise, writing with a 21st-century understanding of gender and women's rights, I would also be biased against certain depictions of her and want to show her actions as reasonable and even virtuous -- quite the opposite of how many of her contemporaries saw her and wrote about her.<br />
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In order to fully understand, fully develop, and fully realize your characters, you need to understand your own perspective on that character!<br />
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Let me know what you think... Leave a Comment!Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-73435269501970873412013-08-05T18:21:00.000-04:002013-08-05T18:21:39.168-04:00To the Desk Drawer!It is an old saw, I know, the writer who relegates the draft to some obscure drawer. <br />
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And yet... many writers I know have done just that. Some chuck the manuscript into the drawer with a feeling of regret, others anger, some despair. There are those who do so reluctantly. (There are many who do so virtually, perhaps having a folder labelled "drawer" on their computers?)<br />
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I would like to argue the case that retiring a manuscript to a drawer is a good, healthy, and productive writing practice. As I write this post, I am entering into the final throes of a (very) rough draft of a novel. If all goes well, in a couple of days, I will be "done" with it. And from there... into the drawer! I say this with zeal. It is time for that baby to sit by itself for a while. My brain has been full of these characters and places and, to be honest (don't tell them!) while I love them, I'm a bit sick of them.<br />
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And though I intend to put them in that drawer and forget about them, it's only for a while. Because, just as I am planning to wind this rough draft down, and just as I am reaching into the far recesses of that drawer to shove the rough manuscript in, I am simultaneously bringing back out to the light of day the rough draft I last worked on about six months ago.<br />
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Perhaps this makes me some sort of serial monogamist when it comes to writing. I can only work on one thing at a time, that is for sure. And while I like to reach an endpoint with a draft (I almost always, even if I feel that it isn't going the way I want it to, write the story/novel/essay to the end.) I also almost always shelve things with the intention to come back to them... often relatively soon.<br />
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So, for me, the drawer is where work goes to get better. Or where work goes while I get better. Too many writers I know (and I preach this to my students as well) will work a manuscript well past the point of productivity, flailing, as it were, at a dead horse. I preach the gospel of putting drafts away early (and often), letting them sit there while you still have some energy and enthusiasm for the project, working on other things, getting new ideas out onto the page, and only when you have almost forgotten about the other draft, going back to it.<br />
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By the time I pull a manuscript out of the drawer to work on it again, I have forgotten what I loved and hated about it. Given enough time, and it even feels like I'm reading someone else's work. And that's good. It gives me the distance I need to edit and revise and rewrite effectively.<br />
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I suppose that what I'm advocating as a writing practice is the same as what I find with people: it's great to spend time with someone... but I'm sure we've all spent too much time with someone. Better to have a wonderful day together, say goodbye, promise you'll meet again soon, even pick a date a few weeks or months in the future... and look forward to it. In the meantime, you'll read and write new things, you'll have different adventures, and you'll return for time together refreshed and engaged. <br />
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So go ahead, toss that manuscript in the drawer, turn the lock. But don't throw away the key.<br />
<br />Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-705410014078914092013-07-28T18:34:00.000-04:002013-07-28T18:34:02.242-04:00Good Reading Yields Good WritingWhen I started my MFA program (back in 2009 at Vermont College of Fine Arts), I dutifully discussed and compiled and reading list for my first semester. But secretly I thought: my main job is <u style="font-weight: bold;">writing</u>... what's the deal with all this reading! I thought I would skim whatever my advisor suggested, cobble together my paper, and then get back to the (much more important) manuscript.<br />
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But, truth be told, the reading turned out not to be something extra (let alone extraneous) but essential. Here's how I think of it.<br />
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<b><span style="color: #741b47; font-family: Verdana, sans-serif;">Reading is medicine for the writer.</span></b></div>
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<span style="font-family: inherit;">What ails you? Weak characterization? Slow plot? Wimpy diction? There's a remedy for that... if you know what to read.</span></div>
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I've been thinking about this lately because I had the change to read Nance Van Winckel's collection of linked short stories, <i>Boneland</i>. (Get it from Amazon <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Boneland-Stories-Nance-Van-Winckel/dp/0806143916/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1375050524&sr=1-1">HERE</a>.) Nance was an advisor of mine while I attended VCFA and I have long been impressed by her short stories and poetry (if you ever have the chance to hear her read... do it! She's a great reader as well as a great writer.)</div>
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These stories are wonderful. Whatever it is you are struggling with in your craft, whatever it is you need a reminder of... this collection is the right prescription. There is nothing better for a writer than to pick up a wonderful book and think: oh, yes... this is how it should be done! </div>
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There were many craft points that inspired me as I read (though I don't want to overemphasize this because <i>Boneland</i> impresses for other reasons: the stories are captivating!) but I kept being drawn to Nance's metaphors. What beautiful comparisons. It made me go back to the manuscript I have been working on and examine what I had done... did I even have metaphors? Were any of them good?</div>
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And that's what, as a writer, I love about reading: it not only entertains me as I get involved in the story but also inspires me to do better in my own craft.</div>
Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-70992815679122690542013-07-20T19:24:00.001-04:002013-07-20T19:25:35.638-04:00On Organization and the Writing ProcessWith these days of summer vacation (not to mention extreme heat), I've logged some pretty good hours at my writing desk.<br />
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And though I am a neat-freak in other areas of my life (go ahead, ask me how I organize my t-shirt drawer... but know that the answer might take a while) my writing desk tends to be rather messy.<br />
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To be clear, it isn't empty pizza box and sticky coffee ring messy (I couldn't deal with that). But it is paper-absolutely-everywhere messy. And I like it that way. <br />
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There are many authors I know who prefer to have a bulletin board over their desk or a white board or simply a large, clear wall surface on which to paste sticky notes. Some folks have elaborate systems on their computer to keep track of thoughts, ideas, storylines, and character development. <br />
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However, I prefer lots of little pieces of paper. I have a legal pad (white, not yellow paper), a medium size scratch pad, a large stack of those hotel notepads (I won't reveal my source), and index cards. I like to jot notes to myself about a scene I'm thinking of, or an essay I want to write when I'm through the novel draft, or something I don't want to forget to go back and fix, or some topic that I need to research. Right now, I'm working on a rough draft and there are notes <u style="font-weight: bold;">everywhere</u>. <br />
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Even stranger, what I like to do with these notes is, mostly, ignore them. I write them and scatter them on my desk. Then I go back to drafting. Sometimes I read them when I get stuck, but mostly I ignore them. I'd like to say I have a system and when I finish a day's work, I read through all the notes and collate them, blah, blah. But I don't. They sit there until I finish the draft, at which point, I scoop them all up, paper clip them, and stick them in manila envelope and file them along with the handwritten draft.<br />
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It is the case that when I am in the revision process, my notes are much more organized. Then, I usually post a coherent list of things to do and keep in mind and I tape it at eye-level on the wall. (Even then, I usually tape up a blank sheet or two for random thoughts and notes.) <br />
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So why do I continue this practice? I don't know that it helps me produce a better draft, but I <u style="font-weight: bold;">do know</u> that it helps me keep peace of mind. Once I write something down, my brain reads that as "taken care of." Sure, there's danger to this: if I actually need to do something and I write it down, then I need to keep that piece of paper handy and <u style="font-weight: bold;">do</u> that thing. However, when I'm writing a rough draft, mostly what I need to do is... <u style="font-weight: bold;">write the rough draft!</u> I don't need to worry about the extraneous questions and thoughts: that's what revision is for. <br />
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In short, while my practice keeps my desk cluttered, it keeps my mind pleasantly clean.Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-43557992979115848572013-07-11T09:35:00.001-04:002013-07-11T09:35:56.414-04:00Character Motivation in General... and Historical Context in ParticularIn any work of fiction, the main character's (or characters') desire drives the piece forward. Don't know what your main character wants? Or can't make that want clear, compelling, and believable to the reader? Then your fiction will never take off. <br />
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Desire is linked to motivation: what you want, how you're going to get it, and why you want it so bad.<br />
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Because of the important of desire in driving fiction, a writer should spend lots of time understanding and deepening this aspect of the story or novel. This is time "off the page," as I like to say, by which I mean that a lot of what you will work on in developing is for your own understanding of the character and not to be included in the finished writing. Well, it will be included but not word by word... your understanding will inform your writing.<br />
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To give you an example of this, I'll use my forthcoming novel, <i>Revolutionary</i>. Early in the story, the main character, Deborah Sampson, runs away from home. Why? That isn't an easy decision to make in anyone's life, at any time, but particularly for a young, unmarried woman in 1782, this would have been an earth-shattering choice. So I needed to understand her motive well.<br />
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Given that Deborah is a historical personage, I could look at material in which she discussed (or others discussed) her motive. From these sources, I gleaned that her motive was money (the town gave a bounty for soldiers signing on), patriotism, and freedom. Of these three, money seemed the least interesting: once she had the bounty, she still ran away, so that couldn't have been the sole motive. Patriotism was a nice thought -- and I don't doubt that she was patriotic -- but this was a reason she offered to her later biographer (Herman Mann) and a very convenient reason it was. It allowed her a virtuous basis for an unvirtuous act.<br />
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That left me with freedom. She desired to break away from the constraints of society, the bounds of her (medium-sized) town, and, particularly, the limited sphere of being a woman. I knew that's what I had to convey on the page, what I had to convince my readers of. But in order to be convincing, I had to know my subject and context much more specifically than that. <br />
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In my next blog post, I'll provide more of the historical context of Deborah, but I wanted to open with this general craft point: start with characters' desires... and let that drive your fiction!Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-18928918044357730352013-07-07T20:21:00.002-04:002013-07-07T20:21:56.020-04:00Feeding Your Writing Self: ReadingA few months ago (as I prepared to move and jettisoned books like a listing ship) I loaned a book to a friend. It was an anthology of nonfiction, and I dogeared for him a particular essay ("The Beautiful City of Tirzah") that I thought he'd like. Recently, he said that not only did he enjoy the reading, but he found that it had inspired him to write.<br />
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<b><span style="color: #741b47;">That's what good reading does.</span></b></div>
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Reading good material feeds the writer's soul. It inspires. Literally. It breathes into you the breath of the writing spirit and tells you: you can, you should, you ought. (Of course, if you are in a negative swirl, reading good material can make you say: I can never do this. But silence those negative voices!)</div>
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I have long believed that, for the writer, reading should be therapeutic. Too often, I hear writer-friends say that they don't have time to read if they are fully engaged in writing mode. But the two should go hand-in-hand. What you read should provide the foundation or the nutrient substrate for what you are writing. It needn't be in the same genre or style. It just needs to speak to where you mind is.</div>
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In fact, I'd even go so far as to say that reading can cure that writing block of which folks often complain. So, if you find yourself stuck or feeling a bit slow, ask yourself: what good have I read today? The right essay or story or novel can spark within you the belief and the desire to begin anew.</div>
Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-19758746424498681432013-07-03T09:52:00.003-04:002013-07-03T09:53:00.379-04:00Vocabulary and WritingRecently, a friend of mine forwarded me a link to the following article on archaic words that linger, vestigially, in our modern usage (the article is <a href="http://mentalfloss.com/article/51150/12-old-words-survived-getting-fossilized-idioms">here</a>). After enjoying the piece and thinking of some other random and "one shot" words -- words that only occur in a set phrase, I started thinking about vocabulary more broadly.<br />
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In fact, this has been on my mind for a while, ever since <i>Revolutionary</i> went through copy-editing. During those rounds of revision, a copy-editor pointed out that I tended to write "amongst" and "midst" which were deemed "archaic" forms. I hadn't noticed that before, and I went back to short stories and other pieces I had written. Indeed, amongst and midst cropped up there as well. Then I paid attention to my speech... and found that I spoke these words (and others on the archaic list).<br />
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All this made me think about what language stands out. I believe that the goal of the copy-editor is to make the writing smooth, in the sense that no word draws the reader out of the story or makes them say, "what?" Of course, you don't want to be confusing, but more than that, you want the words you write to fit the texture -- the soundscape -- of the story. <br />
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Linking to characterization, all characters should use vocabulary that fits their personality; that's an essential of voice. But more than that, the narrative voice, the way in which setting and scene are described, should be clear, consistent, and, well, I guess like wall-paper: it's there, and it makes the room look nicer, but, after a while, you forget it's there.<br />
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So here's my question to you, dear reader... where do you stand on quirky vocabulary? Do you every drop that strange word into a story? Do you do that because it is the right word for that moment? Or because you just like the word? <br />
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I once had a character going for a walk after a rain and enjoying that mineral smell that comes up from the sidewalk. The word for that smell is petrachore -- I love both that smell and that word -- and I had my character use it. When the story was accepted for publication, the editor X-ed "petrachore" out. I wrote back: but it's the right word! Answer: maybe, but no one will know what it means.<br />
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That is the point of vocabulary... to communicate and express clearly. I've had (and taught with) English teachers on both sides of the spectrum, those who say "don't use a dime word when a nickel word will do" and those who preach that you should "dress your words from Saks."<br />
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These days, I tend to former. Simple, direct -- the best word for the moment. It's just that, sometimes, the best word is a little dressy.Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-26557027487119797602013-07-01T19:11:00.000-04:002013-07-01T19:11:13.329-04:00Road Signs & That First DraftWhen I teach introductory writing, the same question often crops up: should I outline and plan a story before I start a draft, or should I just wing it?<br />
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<b><span style="color: #6aa84f;">The answer, as it often is (at least when I'm answering) is: both!</span></b></div>
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Honestly, though, the best answer I ever received to this question came during a workshop I attended at the Ocean State Writers' Conference. (The first writers' conference I ever attended, back when I had just started dabbling with short stories.) The author who was presenting was asked this question and he replied that when he drafts, he starts with an idea (character, place, question) and it's as if he is driving on a highway at night. As he drives, his headlights (writing) illuminates a new sign and he can tell where he is, where he might go. But in between those signs, it's all dark.</div>
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Though I've drafted many different ways (sometimes starting with a firm idea of where I wanted to end up; sometimes with a full outline), this is still my favorite method. Of course, it necessitates additional drafts because the intention/motive/goal of the piece only comes out as it is in progress; you have to go back and clear up themes and the central "strings" of the piece. But what piece of writing can't benefit from that practice? </div>
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This question has been on my mind as I've begun a new rough draft of a piece I've worked on multiple times (I have two full "fair" drafts of it) over the past three years. In doing so, I'm undertaking a very different style of composition. I have those two full drafts lurking in my mind -- that's a whole bunch of road signs! But I want to start fresh... I want to turn off that route (or not; I want the ability to deviate. What's new?). </div>
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The process of trying to do so -- trying to let the story head in a new direction, trying to let it feel its way through itself -- is proving difficult, but it is also emphasizing to me that this is my preferred way to draft. Not quite "seat of the pants" but close! That's where the possibility and imagination can really bubble (and then, through rewriting, ferment). Since I've been thinking about this lately, I thought I'd share my thoughts on the process. </div>
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<b><span style="color: #3d85c6;">What is your preferred method?</span></b></div>
Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5590780652198414065.post-24167827340538422572013-06-28T09:59:00.000-04:002013-06-28T09:59:34.767-04:00The Myth of Molly PitcherGetting back to my earlier blog posts about Molly Pitcher and the question of female war heroes -- how they are portrayed and why we celebrate their achievements (or don't)... I discovered in my internet perambulations a wonderful article by Ray Raphael, which I'll direct you to <a href="http://allthingsliberty.com/2013/05/molly-pitcher-and-captain-molly/">here.</a><br />
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While you should read the full article (it isn't that long and it is fascinating), I'll offer a brief synopsis (more of a teaser) here. Raphael argues that the "real" Molly Pitcher was Margaret Corbin, the somewhat coarse character who was injured in battle. He further presents evidence that the name Molly Pitcher comes not from the battlefield but from a fortune teller in Lynn, Massachusetts. From these two sources, an entirely mythical beast was born: the Molly Pitcher of the battle of Monmouth.<br />
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Not only was this article fascinating for understanding the basis of the legend of Molly Pitcher, but it illustrates several points about female war heroism. As I've said before, we are more comfortable with "dainty" and "proper" sorts of heroes. Raphael points out that pitchers would have been impractical on the battlefield; pails and buckets were more likely (indeed, even the Currier and Ives prints show a bucket in the background!). But the image seems more feminine: a woman traversing the battlefield with a pitcher in hand... it's almost like she's serving someone at a table. That's much more appropriate than the truth. And that's why Deborah Sampson is so troublesome: she doesn't fit those "dainty" boundaries and even myth couldn't remake her story in an appropriately feminine way. <br />
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There's also the detail that the legends of Molly Pitcher weren't invented or popularized until the 1830s. When they were told, they were presented as truth. Each generation likes to make the past over in its own image. I have no trouble with this when its done under the name of historical fiction (or just fiction). In fact, that, to me, is often what good fiction does: it translates. It makes sense of something (from the past or not) and explains it in the context of the author's world. The danger of the Molly Pitcher legend is that it became accepted as truth and, in doing so, obscured the reality of the women who did serve in the war or who followed the army. It is these women whose stories need to be told.<br />
<br />Alexhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16048240354927425846noreply@blogger.com0