Accepting what is to come
Tuesday, July 5, 2022
A Poet I cannot stop reading - Scott Owens
Saturday, July 2, 2022
Learn what writers need to know from Kristen Lamb
The rules, like the component parts of what we call a ‘car’, assisted in the experience. I—me, personally—knew every character in my story. I’d created them, knew their backstories, their secrets, their issues. I had cried when they suffered, laughed at their witty dialogue, glowed with pride when they finally found true love or whatever.
The problem was, while I knew and understood ALL these things, the reader didn’t.
.....So today, we will focus on POV, since most newbies have no clue what it is, how to use it or even that POV is the core way readers ‘follow’ our story. We need to understand what makes sense to them on an intuitive level (as in BRAIN STRUCTURE stuff).
Point of View
Through which character’s perspective is the reader experiencing the story? I have an oldie but goodie post of Point of View and why POV Prostitution (a.k.a. head-hopping) is bad for those who want further explication beyond what I’m giving here.
POV is the most fundamental ‘writing rule’ we must understand if we want readers to not only want to set out on a journey but finish it and love the experience. We must ‘follow the reader’ in that we need to think through their perspective, not just ours.
How is the reader being fed information? What details are important? Who’s story is it? Why is this a story worth money, time, and attention?
Writing Rules for First Person:
Uses the pronouns ‘I/me/mine/my’ and is the most psychologically intimate of the perspectives. This is why it’s been a super popular choice for the social media generation who’s used to being all up in someone’s biz.
First-Person breaks into two camps: The I Remember When and the Come Along with Me. Other than beating the hell out of the pronoun, ‘I’, this is where most writers will run into trouble."
I advise my memoir students to write in first-person point of view. After all, if I am writing about my life, I am the narrator so the reader must be in my head as he/she reads my stories. I want to tell the reader what I remember and how it made me feel. I can't tell you what another remembers or how the events made them feel unless I interview that other person. Then I can tell you what he/she said about the events.
Kristen Lamb has a huge following and she teaches writing classes. Check out her blog and website. You might find that she can help you with your writing.
Tuesday, June 21, 2022
Virtual writing classes end for now.
| Abbie Taylor |
Friday, June 10, 2022
Ron Hill’s life has been a timeline of service to country and community.
| Eighteen year old Ron Hill ready for action in Korea Now in his eighties, Ron continues to work for the good of others. He has long been active in charities in his community. For my readers who live in western NC, Ron is originally from our area and held the position of Director of the John C. Campbell Folk School many years ago. I believe he said he was the first local person to hold that job. In the past 20-plus years, I have met some of the most interesting and genuine people through my writing classes. Ron is one of those people. When we write and share the fabric of our lives in a class with others who are doing the same thing, we form a bond that is almost like family. In a world where so many families and friends have developed a chasm due to political beliefs, I am grateful that the friends I have made in my classes don't let that happen. We don't talk about politics or religion in my classes. Thank you, Ron Hill, for being my friend and for all you do for your community and what you have done for our country. |
Monday, June 6, 2022
First Love
In Love Too Soon
Your aftershave still lingers on my skin,
the smell of bruised spring grass. Raindrops,
I see you by the streetlight
as you walk away, your boots
careless of the puddles.
You stop, turn, look up. I glimpse
the anguish, the disbelief I etched
on your dear face.
You can only see a black hole
I covet your embrace, your kiss,
but fear I’d not be strong enough
to send you away this time.
Our hearts meshed much too soon.
Love crept in while I was unprepared,
still trying to find the woman in the girl.
You grow smaller in the murky light.
Past the movie house where holding
hands on Saturday afternoons, we barely
Past Ray's diner where we first met,
where you gave me your captain's pin,
I cannot turn my eyes away until, like
an apparition, you’re gone, vanished
into darkness and forever.
Thursday, May 19, 2022
Six Week Writing Course has Begun
Monday, May 16, 2022
Poetry by Glenda
In this place where all is fresh,
the sun would shine through gentle rain.
before it could freeze a single rose.
In a land of new beginnings, only joy
would make us weep. No hurt, no pain
would scar our thinking capability.
We’d leave it all behind
like the wake of a ship on blue seas.
I wish there were a place like this
where mourning ceases to exist. I’d go
there, never leave. I’d breathe the pristine
atmosphere, feel healing flow through me,
shedding uncertainty like a chameleon sheds its skin.



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