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Poets &Writers' 2917 Special on MFA Programs.
The September-October 2017 issue has a chart of MFA programs and a lot
of advice and ideas. You may want to consider buying a back copy
of the issue
The best novelists avoid their deficiencies :
Michael Gorra in his Portrait of a Novel: Henry James and the Making of an American Masterpiece
(New York: Liverigtht, 2012), p. 160, quotes Graham Greene's essay "The
Dark Backward': "A novelist's individual technique is more than
anything else a means of evading the personally impossible, of
disguising a deficiency....Lesser writers never realize their
limitations. Many great ones stumble over something a hack might do
with ease."
From a wonderful old piece on whether writing can be taught by Kurt Vonnegut:
"When
the subject of creative writing courses is raised in company as
sophisticated as readers of this paper, say, two virtually automatic
responses can be expected. First a withering 'Can you really teach anyone how to write?' An editor of this very paper asked me that only two days ago.
"And
then someone is almost certain to repeat a legend from the old days,
when male American writers acted like tough guys, like Humphrey Bogart,
to prove that they, although they were sensitive and liked beauty, were
far from being homosexual. The Legend: A tough guy, I forget which one,
is asked to speak to a creative writing class. He says: 'What in hell
are you doing here? Go home and glue your butts to a chair, and write
and write until your heads fall off!' Or words to that effect.
"My
reply: 'Listen, there were creative writing teachers long before there
were creative writing courses, and they were called and continue to be
called editors.'"
Killing
the Angel in the House
It was she who used to come between
me and my paper when I was writing reviews. It was she who bothered me
and wasted my time and so tormented me that at last I killed her. You who
come of a younger and happier generation may not have heard of her– you
may not know what I mean by the Angel in the House. I will describe her
as shortly as I can. She was intensely sympathetic. She was immensely charming.
She was utterly unselfish. She excelled in the difficult arts of family
life. She sacrificed herself daily. If there was chicken, she took the leg;
if there was a draught she sat in it–in short she was so constituted that
she never had a mind or wish of her own, but preferred to sympathize always
with the minds or wishes of others. Above all– I need not say it– she was
preened when I came to write I encountered her with the very first words.
The shadow of her wings fell on my page; I heard the rustling of her skirts
in the room. Directly, that is to say, I took my pen in hand to review that
novel by a famous man, she slipped behind me and whispered: "my dear, you
are a young woman. You are writing about a book that has been written by
a man. Be sympathetic; be tender; flatter; deceive; use all the arts and
wiles of our sex. Never let anybody guess that you have a mind of your own.
Above all, be pure." And she made as if to guide my pen. I now record the
one act for which I take some credit to myself, though the credit right
belongs to some excellent ancestors of mine who left me a certain sum of
money–shall we say five hundred pounds a year?– so that it was not necessary
for me to depend solely on charm for my living. I turned upon her and caught
her by the throat. I did my best to kill her. My excuse, if I were to be
had up in a court of law, would be that I acted in self-defence. Had I not
killed her she would have killed me. She would have plucked the heart out
of my writing.
-- Virginia
Woolf, From "Professions for Women," in The Death of the Moth and
Other Essays, (New York: Haircord Brace Juvenilia, 1970) 236-239.
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John Attanas's notes on Writing Conferences he has attended:
1- Vermont College of Fine Arts Conference-very good teacher/student
ratio. Good teachers who read from their own work each night. Good
opportunity for schmoozing. Downsides-awful accommodations, greasy
food, located in Montpelier, Vermont, one of the oddest and smallest of
state capitals.
2- Sarah Lawrence
College Festival-Great location. NY'ers do not need to live there
during the conference. Good teacher/student ratio. Some schmoozing.
Downsides-expensive food, much "selling" of their MFA program.
3-
Stonybrook/Southampton Conference-I received a scholarship (which means
you can too)! Near the water (although not right next to it). Good
public readings by teachers. Downsides-lousy teacher/student ratio,
acceptable living conditions, known for being cheap on food (although
not when I was there).
ESPECIALLY FOR MIDDLE-GRADE/YA WRITERS:
1-
NJSCBWI conference-excellent two day conference. Lots of good lectures.
Good food. Driveable from NYC. Downsides-expensive, must pay for
facetime, many snotty "professionals" who treat you badly (and some who
treat you nicely).
2- New York SCBWI conference- A Zoo. Best thing-in midtown Manhattan
3-
Los Angeles SCBWI conference- A bigger zoo. Well located in one hotel,
but you need a car to tour LA. I combined it with a trip to see
friends.
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Suzanne Martinez on Iowa Writers Festival:
In
its 32nd year, ISWF offers a broad array of workshops in a dozen
genres: fiction (short story, novel), non-fiction (essay, memoir),
poetry, YA, playwriting, etc. in week-long or weekend sessions
between June 16th and July 27th.
More than a hundred different workshops are offered. I met a woman
there who has written a number of historical novels and had attended
ISWF every year it has been held. In my experience the instruction
varied. Over two summers, I had two excellent instructors and two
mediocre ones. Most instructors have a connection with the Iowa
Writer’s Program. The level of work among the students was high. I
found the experience well worth it. The accommodations at the student
union are plain vanilla, but clean and convenient. Iowa City has many
interesting restaurants and shops. $360.00 for weekend workshops,
$685.00 for week long workshops, plus room, board and travel: https://iowasummerwritingfestival.org
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Jami Attenberg on autobiography & fiction:
"Nonfiction, while more 'true' than fiction, is bound by
limitations in part because of its responsibility to that same truth.
You can know only so much in nonfiction. But with fiction, you can have
it all." I'm not crazy about Attenberg's attitude in this essay, in
which she comes across as having an over-developed sense of
entitlement, but scroll down and find what Junot Diaz and others say
about readers who want to know if fiction really happened.
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Stephen
King tweeted ((@StephenKing): Aspiring fiction writer? Cool! Here are 2
phrases you must NEVER use: "for a long moment" and "for some reason."
Find another way!
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Troy E. Hill on Making a Writers' Group Work
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On drafting a novel and then having to draft again: Ed Davis's blog post.
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Sergio gives us the link to an article about Romance novel covers (and the men who model for them) with lots of insights into an active area of self-publishing.
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YU asks that ...students remember that the evaluation period has started and that they must submit their evaluations by 11:59 p.m. on
the evening of the final class. They won't accept late
evaluations. If you did not receive the email, go to the following
URL to complete their evaluation:sps.nyu.edu/evaluate. Log in with your NetID/Password. This is the same information you use to login to NYUHome.
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Writing summaries and synopses: Daniel José Older and Jenna Moreci (thanks David Martin)
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Does reading literary fiction make you better at reading social clues? This study says yes.
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Are you thinking of writing for young adults?
How old do you think a "young adult" is? Here are a couple of
interesting posts about "New Adult" novels--thanks, David Martin:
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"Robin Hobb" says of her process with her epic fantasy novels, in an interview: "I
have the general premise for the full trilogy in my brain when I start,
but it's not usually formally committed to paper. There will be notes
and cool ideas and sometimes even bits of dialogue. Often those ideas
float around in my brain for years. "Then when the time comes to start
writing, I do a quick chapter breakdown for the first book. I don't
regard it as binding; it's more like a map of how the story might go to
reach the desired endpoint. But as all travelers know, there are many
routes to any destination, so if I see an interesting detour, I'll
probably follow it. I may come to a dead end and have to backtrack, but
there is also the chance that I'll find some really fascinating
unexplored territory or meet a character I didn't expect to be
traveling with.... "The bargain I make with myself is that if I
suddenly see a more interesting direction for the story to take, I'll
follow it. I've regretted that more than once as I ran into brick
walls, but it's what keeps my world and my characters alive and
interesting. If I'm always dictating to my characters, then I'm never
surprised. And surprises keep the story interesting. It can also lead
to moments when you realize you have to discard the last fifty pages as
the story line has trickled to a halt. That's a surprise, too, but not
the kind I like."
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Writers Digest piece on Using Real Life in your fiction.
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Information on Marketing: Go to the resources page, and in particular to the links in the left hand column for: Agents, Articles of interest to writers, online places to submit
fiction, Book Doctors & Private Editors, Book Publishers (small),
Copyright , Literary Agents, Markets for Literary Fiction, Printers:
Recommended book producers (not publishers), Publicizing Your Book ,
and more online resources for
writers.
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Elmore Leonard's Ten Rules for writers. You don't have to agree to be amused.
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Discussion of Memoir and Fiction by Keith Maillard and Carole Rosenthal in Books For Readers Issue #80.
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Phillip Roth and RIchard
Wright on writing.
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Article
on publishing in Salon: "20 percent of a [book's]
budget... pays for paper, printing and binding..."
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Article on how authors get paid
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"The
Business of Books, by André Schiffrin," reviewed by Meredith Sue Willis
(the status of publishing-- old, but has historical interest.)
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Here is a funny poem by Billy Collins about workshopping poetry.
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Take a look at this daunting but important article about publishing by Gerald Howard: http://www.themillions.com/2016/…/the-open-refrigerator.html.
It includes this sentence: "There are these days about as many
uncredentialed walk-ons in our literary fiction as there are walk-ons
in major league baseball."
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