Tag: The Write Spot Blog

  • I Spy. . . Prompt #80

    Today’s writing prompt is inspired from the book, Write Free, Attracting the Creative Life by Rebecca Lawton and Jordan E. Rosenfeld

    This writing exercise is called: I Spy

    List a few things that happened this morning or yesterday. They don’t have to be big or memorable, just whatever falls into your mind.

    The goal is to slow down and take stock of those things you do not normally notice.

    Writing Prompt: Focus on one event and write how you felt about this encounter. Jot down your feelings and then do a freewrite.

    fish 2Did the event make you think of anything else? Did it remind you of other events, experiences, memories or feelings? What were you thinking while it happened, or just before or after?

    Write your freewrite. Type your freewrite and save it.  Log on and post your writing on The Write Spot Blog.

  • You’re doing what? Magazine submissions.

    Adair Lara talked about publishing in magazines during her Summer 2009 Writing Class, giving me the idea for this blog post.

    1. Research . . . really research. . . where you could send your writing. Make sure the publication you have in mind publishes the type of writing you want to submit. Read the magazine you hope to be published in cover-to-cover, including the ads. Notice the tone of the articles/essays. Research the demographics . . . make a list of who the ads are geared towards (age, gender, lifestyle, socioeconomic). Make sure your article/essay fits those demographics. You can research magazines at libraries and ask for magazines from: hairdressers, medical offices, etc. Of course, buying magazines is good. We want to support our local vendors, but sometimes we need to use free resources.

    2. Look at the magazine’s masthead. . . this is in the first few pages of the magazine where the names of editors and contributors are listed. Flip through the magazine, making a list of writers’ names. Compare that list to the names in the masthead. . . If the ratio is high, in favor of the editors, then the magazine uses their own writers, rather than freelancers.

    3. Article written? Check. Research done? Check. Now what? Go to the publication’s website to find the name and email of the appropriate editor for the column/feature/where you want to submit. You can type “Submissions + name of publication” into the search engine of your choice (Google, Firefox, Internet Explorer, etc) to research submissions information.

    You can also type “How to publish in magazines,” using the research tool of your choice, to read about publishing in magazines.

    Think about specialized, or “niche” markets: Your alumnae news, or a specialized newsletter in a field that would be interested in your article/essay. For example, an article about relaxation, stress reduction techniques might work in Autism Parenting Magazine.

    Check out writing magazines (Writer’s Digest, The Writer, Poets & Writers, etc.)  for places to submit articles.  Look into Writers Market for information on “where and how to sell what you write.”

    You can also write posts for blogs.

    Sweatpants & Coffee: “A bastion of comfort and sanity in an often uncomfortable world” is looking for writers.

    The Write Spot Blog is looking for guest bloggers and book reviewers.

    Essays. . . how to write them. . . take a class from Adair Lara.

    One of my all-time favorite essays by Adair Lara is “Reconciling Tastes.

    Adair.at adair's house book“You’re doing what?

    So you do a simple everyday thing like you and your husband moving in with your ex, and people raise their eyebrows.”

    Adair’s funny and poignant story about their domicile arrangements was published in California Magazine, 2011.

    “Literary magazines, even ones that do not offer payment, can bring great value to your writing career. Publication adds to your credibility when applying to MFA programs or querying agents and editors.” — June 2014 The Writer Magazine lists literary magazines accepting submissions.

    Do you have a recommendation of magazines to write for? Share your ideas in the comments section below. First, you need to register, then it’s a simple log-in to The Write Spot Blog.

     

  • Guest Blogger Adair Lara talks about her latest obsession.

    Guest Blogger Adair Lara writes:

    Voice in writing is my new obsession. I’ve been talking nonstop to my memoir students about it until they all look at me cross-eyed. “You must think of your experiences as material! And of yourself as a character!” Many of them have been taking the workshop with me for years, climbing the three flights of steps every Saturday to the redwood attic of the Victorian house I live in.

    I was all about identifying the emotional beats of the arc when some of them started. They must have been sick of hearing me say, “What’s the beat?” (The wine Lee Anna brings helps). And they must have been surprised –why had I not mentioned this new approach before, if it was so important?

    Well, I didn’t because even though voice is the most obvious thing in the world, we don’t see it.

    It’s also all agents and editors care about in the memoirs they are sent these days. They’re looking for a vivid, quirky narrator with an engaging voice. The subject? Comes in second. You think you’re the only one who fell out of a prop plane in the Andes and captured by a lost tribe, and go online and find it happened to six other people, all of whom have written memoirs and already have agents. With a great voice, though, you can write about that or any other damned thing you please and get into print. For example, the agent who received a manuscript of a memoir called Candy Girl by a former stripper-for-a-year named Diablo Cody said:

    “I wasn’t interested based on the subject matter alone. Stripping had been covered before (no pun intended), and I didn’t think the author was likely to add much to an already crowded market. But then there was the voice. After just one paragraph, I was a) completely convinced that stripping was the solution to all of her problems, b) laughing uncontrollably, and c) definitely interested in being along for the entire ride, or at least 250-plus pages.”

    “Personality” is another word for voice, really. If you don’t like a person’s personality, you don’t want to hang out with them. If you don’t like a book’s personality, you don’t want to hang out with it, either. I know that the number one reason I pick up a book or put one down is because I like the voice or I can’t stand the voice. There doesn’t seem to be much in between for me. The subject is not a factor. I can happily read Anne Lamott talking about Jesus—not an interest I share –because she is so funny and smart and self-deprecating.

    Adair.Bill

     Note from Marlene:  Adair Lara is also smart and funny . . . take a class with her to learn more about “voice in writing.” This post is an excerpt from Adair’s book in process. I’ll post a book review as soon as the book is published and I have read it.  If you would like to be a Guest Book Reviewer for The Write Spot Blog . . . Let’s talk! Send me an email.  mcullen@comcast.net

    Adair and Bill on San Francisco Bay, Alcatraz in the background.

  • I read it on Facebook.

    Thursday is Quote Day on The Write Spot Blog. I like to post something interesting someone has said, or pithy or memorable. Adair Lara’s writing matches all three.

    Adair Lara comments, lifted from Facebook:

    “Facebook is destroying small talk. You open your mouth, and they say, ‘I know, I read it on Facebook.’” — January 24, 2014

    Adair on Passwords: “I recall, children, a time when you didn’t have to spend part of each day trying to remember passwords, looking them up in your password file cleverly called something else, like sammy’s dog, putting them in wrong, having to get the password from the site which entails remembering whether you said the name of your maternal grandfather was Tom or Thom, and then having your new password being called weak or strong, and capitalizing the “H” to please them (you’ve employed a variation of the same password since you were 36) and repeating this fricking exercise ten times a day, when who cares whether somebody can get into your toon photos account or not?” — February 6, 2014

    Want Adair humor in person? Take her class, information posted on Facebook, May 8, 2014:

    Shouldn’t you finish that book?

    You put a lot of work in on it, and then laid it aside, or got too busy at work, or lost faith in it.

    Before that, though, you put a lot of time and talent into it.

    You might enjoy a day at my house entirely devoted to writers with stalled projects. I’ll help you decide whether to take it up again, and providing you by the end of the day with a specific plan for doing just that –and perhaps a writing partner, or writing group, to boot. You might decide to at least try to carve some sellable essays out of it.

    Also I’ll give you some killer voice exercises I’ve been developing. You will certainly enjoy meeting your fellow writers. For those who have a completed draft, we’ll talk about publishing/self-publishing.

    Get ready for the workshop by: a) assembling your manuscript and reading it b) researching the competition on Amazon.

    Limited to 15. $175 Sunday June 22 9-4:30 45 minutes off for lunch

    Adair.FB.1

     

     

    Contact Adair:
    Adair.lara@gmail.com

  • Want to be a writer? Just write!

    In Naked, Drunk, and Writing, Adair Lara writes “I grew up in the San Geronimo Valley . . . a bookstruck little kid sitting on a stump writing stories.”

    She continues with “Writing was easy then. I used my dad’s square carpenter pencil to cover sheet after sheet with stories of dogs that rescued families from a flood or a fire.”

    Note the details: Can you see the carpenter pencil? I see a yellow pencil and I can see that little girl hunched over, earnestly scribbling.

    Adair began her writing career as copyeditor at San Francisco Focus magazine. Her friend Cynthia, the production editor, also wanted to be a writer. They started partner writing, swapping freewrites and returning them with the good stuff highlighted in yellow. “That first writing club, as we called it, changed my life. It made me a writer by giving me the confidence to be one.”

    Adair has published “some ten books or so, including several collections of columns.” Her work has appeared in many other magazines and newspapers, both in print and online.  She is currently a columnist for Grandparents.com

    Adair teaches writing workshops, which I had the good fortune to attend in the summer of 2009. What a treat!

    How about you? Do you want to write but don’t know how to get started? You can join a writing group in your community, find a partner to exchange writing with, or join an online writing community like this one, The Write Spot Blog.

    LolaJust write!