Saturday, September 24, 2016

September 22, 2016

Writers’ Roundtable



Welcome

News and Jabber

At this site I found a link that led to a link that led to this:

A Love Story

September 21st, 2016
Before an author can find her readers, she must first find her story. She finds her story by asking herself, “What is the best story I can tell? What is so interesting to me that I cannot take my attention from it? What killer must I see brought to justice, or what woman must find love with what man?” The writer asks and answers these questions, and asks and answers these questions, until the story is told.
Now the author the needs an audience. She wrote this story to satisfy her own curiosity and then share what she found with others. The story is really not complete until someone else has read it, has filled in the blank spaces between the author’s brush strokes with their own imagination. So the author tweets about her story, blogs her story, Instagrams about her story, and travels from bookstore to bookstore talking about her story. By and by she discovers she has a readership.
And perhaps she does a little market research and asks those readers, “How did you find my story?” Some report stumbling over her book in a bookstore, others heard about it from a friend, still others from Facebook or Twitter or The New York Times. Yet all these answers are misleading. These answers say little more about how the reader really found a story than a wedding says about a marriage.
The way the reader really found the story was by asking, “What do I most want to read? What kind of story would be so interesting to me that I couldn’t put it down?” As she asks and answers this question, the reader by and by finds the story, and finishes in her own imagination what the author began in hers. The author-audience connection is in this way a love relationship, two strangers guided together by the single organizing principal of the universe.
9781935961994-Perfect_CS.indd
A book to keep nearby whenever your writer’s spirit needs feeding.” Deb Caletti.
You can find William at: williamkenower.com
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I found it interesting in light of the current assignment to write a one-page piece on what your work is about. This is something I had never done until last spring when I was in the Satureday phase of starting this group. The above is a blog entry from yesterday and it appears that the writer blogs quite regularly and may be worth a scan.

The Current Assignment

How did it go? What questions did it spawn? Problems? Results?


The Next Assignment


The Next Meeting

The next meeting will be on September 13, 2016. Same time, same place (maybe)

Other Jabber




3 comments:

  1. Opened and read "Love Story" above. Had just read from 50 something comments on writing by writers: Elmore Leonard, "Leave out the boring parts."
    Stephen King, "Cut to speed the pace." John Grisham " Before you become a writer, experience somethings."

    As for many others, I have experienced a great deal as a school administrator, assault, suicide, and murder involving my students. [not unusual nowadays]

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  2. Currently, I write for SUN Magazine's "Readers Write" section on topics selected by the editors. One of my pieces appeared in this month's issue. The editors do heavy editing, so go the suggestions to contributors. The piece I read last week is for next year. For me, writing for this magazine is both a challenge and an
    experience. I have written op. ed pieces for the local papers and for the Time's discontinued CT Section. G

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