It's been two days since I escaped from Maine, barely missing the Nor'easter that hit Freeport and dumped buckets of snow on top of an already snow covered land. It's also been two days since I left the Winter 2008 Stonecoast Residency, and I'm already missing my friends.
My second residency was nothing short of exhausting and amazing. Ten days of readings, writing, critiquing, and listening have stoked my desire to write. This is a very good thing since I have an incredibly aggressive semester in front of me. Yes, I know, I am an overachiever. Then again, Jason did give me the "overachiever" super power in his Pop'Fic Super Heroes story. How can I let this power go to waste? :-)
I have the amazingly good fortune to be mentored by Nancy Holder this semester. Her experience and my needs (and there are many!) are a perfect match. Over the next five months, I'll be blasting through the first draft of my novel, doing research for my 3rd semester project and thesis, and begin organizing my paper on the art of adapting story from one form to another.
Having a chance to work with Jim Kelly last semester was just what I needed. He's a fabulous story doctor and he has helped to push my writing to the next level. In addition, I had some great workshops this semester with Mike Kimball, Julia Spenser-Fleming, and Nancy Holder. After having my workshop manuscripts critiqued by them, I finally feel like I'm "getting it". Writing is a difficult process, but it's not impossible. The key to writing is time, energy, and a stubborn need to persevere no matter what.
To anyone thinking about writing, my best advice is to just do it. Put those words down on paper no matter how crappy they are right now. Literary beauty comes with revision, and not even Shakespeare can revise a blank piece of paper.
My second residency was nothing short of exhausting and amazing. Ten days of readings, writing, critiquing, and listening have stoked my desire to write. This is a very good thing since I have an incredibly aggressive semester in front of me. Yes, I know, I am an overachiever. Then again, Jason did give me the "overachiever" super power in his Pop'Fic Super Heroes story. How can I let this power go to waste? :-)
I have the amazingly good fortune to be mentored by Nancy Holder this semester. Her experience and my needs (and there are many!) are a perfect match. Over the next five months, I'll be blasting through the first draft of my novel, doing research for my 3rd semester project and thesis, and begin organizing my paper on the art of adapting story from one form to another.
Having a chance to work with Jim Kelly last semester was just what I needed. He's a fabulous story doctor and he has helped to push my writing to the next level. In addition, I had some great workshops this semester with Mike Kimball, Julia Spenser-Fleming, and Nancy Holder. After having my workshop manuscripts critiqued by them, I finally feel like I'm "getting it". Writing is a difficult process, but it's not impossible. The key to writing is time, energy, and a stubborn need to persevere no matter what.
To anyone thinking about writing, my best advice is to just do it. Put those words down on paper no matter how crappy they are right now. Literary beauty comes with revision, and not even Shakespeare can revise a blank piece of paper.


Comments
And you could get into Stonecoast. You really really could. I think you would love it!
- Reading Approx 5-10 books of your own choosing
- Writing 2 annotation per month (1-2 pages, double spaced)
- Approx 20-25 pages of prose (Some instructors accept revisions, too. So it doesn't always have to be new fiction.)
- Critiquing 16-20 stories over a 2 month period, twice per year
- Reading approx 5-10 books for the residency
- Attending a 10 day residency twice a year
When you space it all out, it's not too bad.
I do more than this because I have ADD and I need to have LOTS of things going at once for me to stay focused. Don't ask me how that works. I don't understand. But the less I have going, the less focused I am. I'm so odd.