Visual Prompt: What a Picture Paints

I used lived across the street from the beautiful Vassar College campus in Poughkeepsie, NY.  I woke up one foggy morning, grabbed my camera, and went for a walk.

I ended up with an incredible mix of photos, but this one is my favorite.  Years later, when I look at it, I am still filled with a deep sense of quiet and calm … exactly what I was feeling that morning.

The thing that stands out most about this photo is that it presented itself at the end of my walk, after I stopped looking for photos and started to simply enjoy the peacefulness.

It’s that way with writing, too.  When we struggle too much to find the right word, sometimes it becomes too elusive and slips further away.  Then, later, when it’s quiet, the word whispers to us, still but certain.

I try to honor those moments and not scramble around looking for my notebook, but I also know that if I don’t write it down quickly, it could slip away again.

That’s the fickle nature of the muse, I suppose.

I’m sharing this photo now as a visual writing prompt.  Take a good long look and let your mind wander.  Then let your words whisper and see where they lead.

Positively Sharing Literary Link Love

A few long weeks ago, for the second time in as many years, my laptop brain fried, and I lost everything.

What a headache.

On the positive side, because it happened before, I had just about everything backed up.  On the other positive side, I had been saving all of my bookmarks online because losing your bookmarks once is devastating, losing them a second time would be even more devastating.

If we can squeeze a third positive out of this (and I think we can), in getting my sweet new computer up and running, I decided it was time to clean out some of those bookmarks that haven’t been used since my 9th grade term paper on S.E. Hinton.

Positive #4: I now have a wonderful collection of literary websites to share.  This isn’t my complete list; I’ll be adding more as I continue sorting.  If you’d like your blog or site listed here, please let me know.

And now on to the links.  I’m positive you’ll enjoy them all.

Literary Link Love:
Arts & Letters Daily: A daily report of news in the arts and ideas.
Bookforum: Book reviews, author interviews, and commentary
Booksquare: The whole truth and nothing but the truth, unless making it up is easier or funnier
Cannon Fodder: One reader’s journey reading the classics and blogging about them
The Critical Poet: An online poetry forum
Editor Unleashed: Writing, publishing, social media, and community
Editorial Ass: Notes from a recovering editorial assistant
Electric Literature: A quarterly anthology of five top-notch short stories, delivered in every viable medium
Emerging Writers Network: For emerging and established writers and the readers who love them
Escape Into Life: An online arts journal featuring art reviews, poetry, essays, and lots of art
Fictionaut: For adventurous readers and writers
The Fill in the Gaps 100 Project: Post 100 books you plan to read over the next five years (or read everyone else’s list)
Girlebooks: Ebooks by the gals
Hilobrow: An encounter with uncompromising arts and ideas
Janet Reid, Literary Agent: Reading queries for fun, fodder, and best-selling books
JMWW: A quarterly journal of fiction, poetry, flash, nonfiction, and art
Kenyon Review: Exclusive works of fiction,poetry, essays, and more
Lit Kicks: Opinions, observations, and research on the meaning and relevance of literature in modern life
Literary Mama: An online literary magazine featuring mama writers
Make a Scene: Author, journalist, and editor Jordan Rosenfeld
The Millions : Online magazine offering coverage on books, arts, and culture
Nathan Bransford: Literary Agent
Poetic Asides: Writer’s Digest poetry site with Robert Lee Brewer
Poetry Speaks: Experience poetry in exciting new ways
Poets.org: From the Academy of American Poets
Six Sentences: What can you say in six sentences?
Three Guys One Book: Reviews, publishing news, photography, and the popular 3G1B group discussion
The Nervous Breakdown: An online literary publication type deal
Tin House : The online edition of the American literary magazine
Web Fiction Guide: The name says it all
A Writer’s Edge: English words, writing, and books–with a tech touch
The Writing Show: Information and inspiration for writers

Writers: When Inspiration Sags, Hit the Books

One of the many joys of being a writer is finding something that moves you so deeply that you’re inspired to write.  What happens, though, when that initial flush fades, and you’re far from finishing what you’ve started?

Staying motivated is a challenge writers face daily.  As a world-class procrastinator, I can find hundreds, okay, thousands of diversions that keep me from writing.  Sometimes just the process of getting started inspires me, but I’m not always so lucky.  When I’m feeling particularly stagnant, I turn to my favorite books to push me forward.

Dennis Tafoya, author of DOPE THIEF and the soon to be published THE WOLVES OF FAIRMOUNT PARK also finds inspiration in books.  On his blog, Dennis Tafoya’s Bad Neighborhood, he has started sharing info on books that have taught him something about writing.

He starts his Books That Teach series with SAVE ME, JOE LOUIS by Madison Smartt Bell and explains what the book taught him.  He also asks for input.  Please visit Dennis’ site and share your favorites.

Can you guess which author I included?  Hint: His first name is Philip and his last name is Roth. (Hi Philip! Love you!)

Need a different inspiration boost? Join The Silent Writers Collective on Tuesdays at 9 PM Eastern (US) for the next Silent Write-In.

Go Silent every Tuesday at 6 PM EST-US

Our standing meeting is Tuesday at 9-10 pm EST and 9-10 pm PST (US), but participants are encouraged to “Get Silent” whenever the mood strikes, either alone, with others, online, or in person.

We meet via Twitter using the hashtag #SilentWriters. If you aren’t on Twitter, we have a group on Facebook, or just click the email link to the right, and we’ll get you in on the fun.

Our gatherings start with a few minutes of socializing, sharing info, etc, but after that we all agree to shut up and write.  We’re not a critique group, we’re not limited by genre, education, experience, or skill. We just get together to write.

We hope you’ll join in.  We’re a new group, but everyone who’s gone silent with us has found it’s productive hour.  Gotta love that!

Whenever, Wherever: Finding Time to Write

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Turn Down Time into Writing Time and Watch Your Creativity Blossom

Stephen King does it every day.  So does J.K. Rowling.  Philip Roth does it every day, too.  He even does it standing up!

Successful authors know that daily writing is the key to creating a rich, rewarding writing life.  But for those of us with busy families, jobs, and other commitments that leave little time for creativity, the thought of writing a grocery list, let alone a sentence, can seem daunting.

Your Time, Your Way
The good news is that although it may seem daunting, it’s definitely doable.  By using down time, you know, those annoying little pockets of time when you’re forced to wait and your blood pressure is forced to rise? Yeah, those! By using that time to write, instead of wait, you accomplish two big things.  First, you write! Second, you’re using your time to your advantage.

Keep a pad and pen with you all the time, and start watching for those moments when you could sneak in a sentence, or a paragraph.  Even writing the seed of an idea gets your creative mind working.  That habit keeps building on itself, and before you know it you’re writing those words you always knew you had inside you.  Once it starts, keep going!

Here are a few situations where you might put your own down time to use:

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  • Grocery Store Check-Out Lines. The worst! They’re notoriously long and slow.  I used to pass the time reading People magazine (oh, poor – pick one – Sandra Bullock, Jennifer Aniston, Kate plus 8, etc.) It was a guilty pleasure, but I find a lot more pleasure in pinpointing that character trait that’s been eluding my main character or the plot point that’s been vexing me.
  • Waiting for the Kids. When I was a kid, my mother used to get in the car about 15 minutes before we had to go anywhere. All these years later, I realize she wasn’t obsessively early (well, she was a little), she just liked the quiet time she found in the car while the rest of us were running around in a chaotic frenzy.  If your kids are at an age where they can get themselves ready, let them!  If you’re constantly running around town picking them up or dropping them off, use the waiting time to write.  Write.  Write.

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  • During the Commute. This is for those who take public transit, of course, but driving commuters can benefit, too.  Traffic jams and long stop lights could allow you to sneak in a few words here and there, but for goodness sake, err on the side of extreme caution.
  • Waiting Rooms. When I typed in “What to do in a waiting room,” Google came back with 28,200,000 results.  Do you think this is a universal annoyance?  It might be for most, but for writers, it’s a prime time to get the pen moving.

These are just a few ideas, but I’d love to hear from you.  Do you have a secret time stash where you can always sneak in some writing?  Share it here, and we can all benefit!

Let It Flow

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Next Silent Write-In Tuesday, 4/27

Ray Bradbury said,

We are cups, constantly and quietly being filled. The trick is knowing how to tip ourselves over and let the beautiful stuff out.

Join us for the next Silent Write-In and tip yourself over to let the beautiful stuff out.

The Silent Writers Collective is meeting again this Tuesday, April 27 at 9 pm EST (6 pm PST).  As always we will meet via Twitter using the hashtag #silentwriters.

The Write-In begins promptly at 9 pm EST, with a few minutes of chat, news, tips, questions, etc. Then the we go silent and commit one hour to writing.  At the end of the hour, participants can continue writing (and are encouraged to do so).

No RSVP necessary, just show up on Twitter, watch for the hashtag and join in.

If you aren’t on Twitter, we have a group on Facebook, or just click the email link to the right, and we’ll be sure to get you in on the fun.

Please spread the word to all your writing friends.

Hope to see you Tuesday!

BIC HOK TAM: We’re Not Talking Thai

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Silent Write-In This Tuesday

Butt in Chair.
Hands On Keyboard.
Typing Away Madly.
That’s the motto of Book-In-A-Week, the website where writers commit to a scheduled writing frenzy for one week each month.  Think NaNoWriMo in hyperdrive.

As a three time winner of the Writer’s Digest 101 Best Websites for Writers, the site is clearly onto something good.  Namely, that if you’re going to write, it takes time, commitment, and effort.

Along those lines, the next Silent Write-In will be Tuesday, April 20 at 9 pm EST (6 pm PST).  We will meet via Twitter using the hashtag #silentwriters.

The Write-In begins promptly at 9 pm EST, with a few minutes of chat, news, tips, questions, etc. Then the we go silent and commit one hour to writing.  At the end of the hour, participants can continue writing (and are encouraged to do so).

No RSVP necessary, just show up on Twitter, watch for the hashtag and join in.

If you aren’t on Twitter, we have a group on Facebook, or just email me and I’ll get you in on the fun.

Please spread the word to all your writing friends.

Hope to see you Tuesday!

Flash Fiction: Going Vocal

© Olivia Tejeda

Pat Sajak’s voice filtered into the bathroom as Catherine stood nervously doing her hee hees.

Hee hee hee.  She breathed.  Hoo hoo hoo.

Her vocal warm-ups usually settled her nerves, but this was a bad case and they weren’t helping.

Hee hee hee.  Hoo hoo hoo.

Knowing her courage could slip at any moment, Catherine stepped into action, standing straighter, and striding toward the living room.

“Aunt Dee,” she said focusing in the dark room.  “Do you have a minute?”

“Hi dear,” Aunt Dee absently waved Catherine in.  “Come watch Wheel with me.”

The light from the TV cast blue shadows around the room.  Aunt Dee never used the lamp when she watched TV.  “I’d rather not support the power company,” she’d say when Catherine used to ask if she could turn on a light.

“I-I’d like to talk to you,” Catherine steadied her voice.  “It’s kind of important.  Would you mind if we lowered the TV?”

Aunt Dee sighed, irritated by the imposition.

Catherine clenched her fists, her nails digging tiny crescents into her palms.  She had been living at Aunt Dee’s since being discharged from Sunnyvale ten years ago, and it still didn’t feel like it home.

After Catherine’s parents died in a car crash, she tried finishing her senior year at Juilliard.  She wanted to honor her parents by getting the degree in voice they had all worked for since Catherine was a child, but during her senior recital, Catherine froze on stage, unable to sing, speak, or move.  She was admitted to Sunnyvale after a botched a suicide and stayed for a year.

“I’m sorry,” Catherine said, her courage slipping. “I’m interrupting your show.”

“Yes, dear, Wheel of Fortune is on.”

“Yes.  Right.  Sorry.  We’ll talk later.”

“No,” Aunt Dee grumbled, waving again.  “I’m already missing this round.  May as well keep going.”  Her comment hit the mark as always, evoking in her subtle yet piercing way, the constant sacrifices she made for her niece.

Catherine looked for the remote to mute the TV, but Aunt Dee had it tucked between the seat cushions next to her. She tried to reach for it without Catherine seeing, and Catherine played along, pretending to notice something beyond the dark window.

“Well, out with it.  Are you in trouble?”  Aunt Dee asked lowering the volume one level.

“Oh, nothing like that,” Catherine said sitting opposite.  “Everything’s fine.  I-I just wanted to let you know that I’ve decided to sing at the Jeffersonville Talent Show next month.

Aunt Dee’s face turned stony.  Her ears pulled back, tightening the skin across her cheeks.  She looked furious, but stayed silent.

Catherine’s excitement boosted her courage again.  “I’ve been thinking about it for a while.  My voice teacher thinks I’m ready, and I think so, too.”  Her smile beamed.

“I see.”

“I know you’re worried.  I’m nervous, too, but I’m finally ready, and I have to try.”

“I see.”

Aunt Dee nodded, allowing herself time to form an argument.

“Catherine … Dear … I really thought we were done with all this foolishness.  You’re not a child anymore. I thought we let that silly dream go a long time ago.”

“No,” Catherine whispered.  “I never let it go.  You remember how much singing meant to you.  It’s the same for me, and now I’m ready to try again. My voice teacher says …”

“Your voice teacher!” Aunt Dee snapped.  “Your voice teacher doesn’t know you were a mental case.”

Catherine nodded.  “She does, actually.  I told her.”

“Catherine!  Why?  She couldn’t possibly understand.”

“But she does.  She does understand.  She’s taught me so much, and she’s been so helpful.”

“Is that so?” Aunt Dee sneered.  “Will she be so helpful you when go batty up on stage again?”

Catherine sighed.  “I’m not going to have another breakdown.”

“Well if history is any indication …”

“That was a long time ago,” Catherine pleaded.

“Maybe for you, but it seems like just yesterday for me.  What I went through.  Every week, I had to drive to that hospital!  I only thank God your parents weren’t alive to suffer through it like I did.”

“Aunt Dee.”

“No, it’s true.  It was terrible.  I’m sorry to say this, but they had you so drugged you don’t remember anything, but I do.”

“But I’m much older now, and stronger,” Catherine said.  “That was right after Mom and Dad died, and …”

“May God rest their tormented souls,” Aunt Dee interrupted.  She bowed her head and made the sign of the cross, a move that always worked to deflate Catherine, until this time.

“It’s just one song at one show.  I have to do this, and I’d like to have your blessing.”

“Dear,” Aunt Dee’s face softened. “You know I only want what’s best for you.”

Catherine realized at that moment that those words, “I only want what’s best for you” were the lynch pin for years of manipulation.  She looked at her aunt and tried not to believe what she knew was true.

Aunt Dee looked away as if she’d been caught.  “Oh, dear!” she said, changing the subject.  “We almost missed the end.”

The two of them sat together in the blue shadowed room watching the bonus round.  They guessed the answer at the same time, just before the contestant got it.

♦  ♦  ♦

When the talent show was over, Catherine was exhilarated.  She did it, and was awarded an honorable mention certificate, which surprised and thrilled her.  She was backstage congratulating the other winners when Aunt Dee found her.

“Poor dear,” Aunt Dee said.  “You did your best, but I guess that ship has sailed.”

“Didn’t you see?” Catherine said, holding up her certificate.

“That’s nice, dear, but you didn’t win.”

Catherine smiled and shook her head.  Aunt Dee continued.  “We’ll meet outside, dear.  Why don’t you go say goodbye to your friends.”

“Actually, Aunt Dee, I’ll see you at home.  I’m going to go to the after-show party,” Catherine said. “With my friends.”

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Thank you for reading my flash fiction. Please share any constructive criticism and feel free to let me know about any errors you find here. To read more flash fiction from a great group of writers, search #fridayflash on Twitter or visit Mad Utopia.

To Write Good Books, Skip the How-Tos

Richard Bausch: Put the manuals away, read the writers themselves

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It’s exciting news that The Atlantic is again publishing fiction.  The May issue is out now, and it includes Fiction 2010, the annual fiction supplement to the magazine.

There are some wonderful writers included, and I plan on spending a good part of my weekend being both entertained and educated by them.

There’s one piece in particular I’d like to share with The Silent Writers: The essay titled, How to Write in 700 Easy Lessons by Richard Bausch.

Bausch’s love of his craft comes through so strongly and beautifully that it’s hard not to find inspiration in it.  The essay advocates something we’ve all heard many times before. Namely, in order to write well, one must read, read, read.  He’s not talking about how-to writers books that proclaim some kind of shortcut to a finished product, he’s talking about literature.

He goes beyond telling us that we must read by explaining why it matters.  To paraphrase, Bausch says:

Spend the time to absorb what is there in the vast riches of the world’s literature, and then craft one’s own voice out of the myriad of voices.

This incredible thought humbles me. That Boccaccio, Flaubert, Bronte, Hemingway, Judy Blume, S.E. Hinton, and, of course, Philip Roth (my personal favorite), are out there waiting to teach us, is a richness I’d never considered.  We can absorb and learn from them, and then with time, effort, patience, passion, and great great love, we can go on and our own voices.

A Great Start and the Next Step

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Our first online Silent Write-In went remarkably well.  We had 11 participants, seven on Twitter, two on Facebook and two via email.

The feedback I heard told me that it was a productive hour, so I’m excited to keep the momentum going.  The next scheduled Write-In is scheduled for this Tuesday, 9 pm EST, but rather than waiting, I thought we might try one this weekend.  What time? Well, I’ll put out it there for a consensus.  Weekend schedules can be crazy, so please let me know via comment what day and time works best for you.

With interested writers from across the U.S., Canada, Australia, the UK, and beyond, timing can be dicey, so I’m open to scheduling Write-Ins whenever they’re needed or wanted.

I will also mention that anyone is welcome to use the #SilentWriters hashtag.  If you have a group of writers you work with, and you want to get together online to write, please feel free to use it.

Thanks again for all the interest, and please spread the word.  We writers need to keep each other motivated!