Showing posts with label texas writers authors hill country. Show all posts
Showing posts with label texas writers authors hill country. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

To learn, or not to learn, that is the question.

Some friends and I attended the Texas Writers Conference event on Monday night at Schreiner University.  The keynote speaker was Bret Anthony Johnston, who is from Corpus Christi but is currently the director of creative writing at Harvard University.  Bret read for us and took questions.  He was funny and charming and complimentary of the questioners.  I figured he had to be pretty damned smart to be teaching at Harvard.  I wasn't disappointed.

Bret's writing is character-centric, which now seems different to me than storyline-centric.  The action in his stories is inside the characters.  I think this might be the way to write the Great American Novel; I am still trying to write a story as good as Last of the Mohicans.

My question for you is, can creative writing be taught?  There are a lot of classes which offer this.   My friend Tom learns well by reading and in classroom settings.  I learn best by doing.  What about you?  Your comments are invited.
  Bret Anthony Johnston

Sunday, April 12, 2015

The Tractor

I talked with my friend Robert Schwarz last night on the telephone.  He lives about as far out in the middle of nowhere as one can get these days and still be in the hill country.  He has written most of his two memoirs in a spiral notebook with a pencil on the hood of his old ranch truck in a pasture in that middle of nowhere.  He told me of a time he spent struggling with a paragraph, and when suddenly, there it was, clear as day, while he was baling hay, he stopped the tractor and wrote it down  with a pencil from the toolbox on a feed sack he was using as a seat cushion.  Here is an excerpt from "R L and Other Stories"

Tall at slightly over six feet; slender maybe 160 pounds, muscular with the long, thin untiring muscles of the fields and cedar brakes; sharp features; large intense brown eyes, short scissor cut brownish hair; smooth faced without even a hint of a beard; short upper body with long legs; floppy battered grey felt hat with a high crown and wide brim turned downward all around; work worn scarred calloused hands with long fingers liberally coated with the blackish tar like cedar resin; leathery skin - Ben was the archetypical cedarchopper.

Robert has been to a couple of Conference meetings, and one of these meetings we'll get in a discussion about writing.  For me, the Conference is about just that - talking about writing with other writers.

Talk up our short story contest, tell your friends about the Conference, and if you have a really good paragraph you would like to share, send it to me.  As always, your comments on this blog are invited.

Me?  I'm still trying to write a paragraph as good as Robert's.



Sunday, July 20, 2014

Write or Die

 
 
We have at least 6 people interested in a version of Sit Down, Shut Up, and Write.  I'll go over this concept with the FWC Brain Trust and we'll set a meeting, as well as another Open Critique Group.

We are looking at September 18 or 25 for the next Conference meeting.  I am hoping to get Publisher and Editor Ken Esten Cook of the Fredericksburg Standard Radio Post as our speaker.  I messed up the planning for that, we did the Shameless Self Promotion Workshop with Eva Pohler instead, but I forgot to announce that and tell the speaker it wasn't happening.  Eva put everything she told us about promoting our work in an ebook.  If you couldn't make the class, buy the ebook and take notes as you go. 

There is a good blog on writing by a sassy and irreverent Canadian at http://bareknucklewriter.com/  "I like to have the grunt writing work done before noon, pouring out all the novel stuff in a caffeine-fueled rush like a hail of word-bullets."  She recommends downloading http://writeordie.com/ and setting it to kamikaze mode, which deletes words if you don't keep typing.

You might wonder what Fredericksburg Writers Conference is all about.  Here you go:

Support and encourage writers of all kinds by:
- quarterly meetings with interesting speakers.
- building relationships through critique groups and other meetings.
- holding an annual agent and editor conference just like the big guys .
- holding seminars on related skills (as in the recent promotion seminar, in which we net $250 towards that goal).

I believe we are finding a core group of writers to build this program around.  The way it works so far is that Mara Fox Moretti has the ideas, and I know how to make them happen.

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Bragging Rights

Members of the Fredericksburg Writers Conference have published:

Barbara Elmore  Breathing Room    1994
                           Crookwood    2000
                           Saviors of the Bugle   2003
                           Current project:  historical novel

Victoria Rust     The Feel of Silk   2010
                          The Unanticipated Heir   2010
                          Searching   2011

Kent Rylander   Behavior of Texas Birds 2002 U.T. Press

Barbara Lloyd   The Colours of Thailand   1997
                          The Colours of India    1989            
                          Reflections of Spain    1992
                          China: Travels Between the Yangtze and Yellow Rivers  2007

Mara Fox          I Shocked the Sheriff   2005
                          Letting Loose!   2007
                          Letting Go!    2009  
                          Shades of Desire   2014

Robert C Deming   Enchanted Rock Red  2010
                                Enchanted Rock Blue(s)  2012
                                Awol 21   2013
                              
Sally Clark   Where's My Hug?  2015 CandyCane Press