Showing posts with label SCBWI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SCBWI. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Fall Conference Report - Harold Underdown

Harold Underdown spoke about turning off the literary critics in our heads and focusing on the emotional impact of writing. The exercise is simple and tremendously powerful.

Read a few lines of writing.
Jot down what you are feeling.
Repeat with the next section of writing.
See how your emotions change.

This technique is terrific for revising your own work and for analyzing other people's writing. It's fun to do as a group because reactions vary so much.

The hard part is quieting that internal literary critic. In the first example Harold gave (The Children of Green Knowe by L.M. Boston), the scene opens with a boy riding a train by himself, and outside it's raining. My first reaction was: Oh no another sad scene in the rain. Tired metaphor. But when I forced the literary critic to sit down and shut up, I realized it wasn't a sad scene, and the rain was simply part of the setting.

Go ahead. Try it. And let me know how it works.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Fall Conference

Last week, I promised conference reports here on this blog. My brain (and my house) are still pretty cluttered, but I hope to distill a few drops of wisdom to present here in the next few days. Unfortunately, something seems to be wrong with my camera or my eyes because most of the pictures I took are out of focus.

The conference organizers did a marvelous job. I know how much effort goes into planning an event like this.

Friday, October 2, 2009

SCBWI-Michigan Conference

Today I'm heading out for the SCBWI-MI fall conference. It's supposed to rain all weekend, but I'll be inside learning how to improve my craft, right? I plan to bring my camera and notebook, and with any luck, a few conference-related posts will appear here next week.

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Words of Wisdom

I collected these tidbits at yesterday's SCBWI-MI conference.

"Dare to look at life and story on a slant." -- Patricia Gauch

"Don't ever throw something away you have worked on." -- Sarah Cloots

"Complaining is a big part of my process." -- David Small

"I want us all to slow down to andante." -- Sarah Stewart

Thursday, May 22, 2008

The Odds Were Against It


Amazingly, I won one of the manuscript critique slots at the upcoming SCBWI-MI conference. My critique is with Sarah Cloots, an editor at Greenwillow Books.