Inspiration comes from unlikely places in the form of ears going ping, ping, ping and your fingers tingling as you reach for a pen
or keyboard.
Cherry Mattias, DVM, and I attended the Writers of KernSpring conference yesterday. Writers of Kern (WOK)
is a branch of the California Writers Club serving Bakersfield
and its surrounding communities. WOK provides a forum for published and
aspiring writers to share ideas, hone their craft and encourage one another.
The yearly conference held in Bakersfield, California brought together poet Matthew Woodman,
mystery icon Anne Perry and Victoria Zackheim, and Bakersfield Californian columnist Lois Henry.
All of the presenters, who are what you’d call professional writers, have thought
deeply about the subject of voice or persona.
With the exception of Lois Henry they speak of their love of their
craft.
What unified the three disparate speakers was an insistence
on writing honestly and from the heart. Victoria Zackheim, a playwright, novelist, and writing
teacher pushes her students in the UCLA Extension Writer’s Program to go deeper
and deeper in writing the personal essay to heal the raw patches in one’s own
soul. Anne Perry, author of 80 novels with 27 million copies sold, stated readers
instantly spot insincerity. Zackheim and Perry are fast friends and speak
daily, brainstorming plot ideas and spurring each other on.
I’m sure I wasn’t alone in wishing I could be part of these conversations.
Matthew Woodman, who teaches writing at California State
University Bakersfield, skillfully presented a session on how to adopt a voice
particular to a poem, drawing on the work of Carl Jung’s archetypes and the
contemporary adaption of Jung’s ideas in the work of Carol Pearson. Voice and
persona are airy ideas that sometimes feel ethereal. I was impressed and
pleased at Woodman’s skillful explanation, illustrating the concepts with poems, one of
them his own.
I read a lot of fiction, a lot of crime fiction as well, and
I sometimes forget how much I enjoy poetry’s concise evocation of feeling. I
seem to need 300-350 pages to tell a story and here was Woodman’s poem in
sonnet form updating the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice in Los Angeles.
Lois Henry, who reports and writes and twice-weekly column
for the local newspaper, claims to hate writing. Winner of major awards for
journalism, she’s pressed often to collect her columns into a book. She can’t imagine anything worse than writing
all day then going home to write in the evening, to paraphrase her remarks. A
breezy and fresh voice in the afternoon of the conference, she focused on the
nature of her craft which is to entertain and inform her readers with crisp, accurate,
and economical prose.
Cherry Mattias, DVM, my co-founder of the Bakersfield
Sisters in Crime chapter, is a beginning mystery writer. We were there to not
only learn from the presenters but also to drum up support for our fledgling
mystery writers’ group. The group of about 75 eager attendees represented the
range of the writing craft: creative non-fiction (memoir writing), romance,
science fiction, local history, poetry—from beginners to seasoned
professionals.
Sadly there were few mystery writers.
Nonetheless, it was an interesting and worthwhile day spent
with engaging presenters which made me rush home to my computer to start
writing my sixth Dave Mason mystery.
Check out my new eBook. Don't fall prey to self-doubt and the Why Bother syndrome.
http://www.amazon.com/Finishing-Your-First-Mystery-Writing-ebook/dp/B01CF367BU/
Check out my new eBook. Don't fall prey to self-doubt and the Why Bother syndrome.
http://www.amazon.com/Finishing-Your-First-Mystery-Writing-ebook/dp/B01CF367BU/
2 comments:
I don't have time to go to as many conferences as I'd like to and enjoy hearing about them from others like you who come back and give us a synopsis.
Your book is a topic I haven't seen around and I've read and heard of numerous writing self-help books. There was a time when this topic would've been a real help to me. I know a number of people currently struggling with their first novel, and I am going to pass this information on to them.
I have a love/hate relationship with my writing. My discipline is slipping, and I mainly write when I'm in the mood. When that happens, I get caught up in writing and want to keep on.
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