Monday, June 24, 2013

Sense of Place

The setting...feelings bound up in places...the crossroads of circumstances...the setting. There is something about watching a movie set in a locale I know well that is appealing, exciting even. I watch to see how the characters move through my city or town. I look for the familiar. Didn't you do that as you watched Silver Lining Playbook? I knew that was Upper Darby HS. I knew there was no way he jogged to the diner from where he lived, but the family home was so accurately staged. I do the same thing when eading a work of fiction that is set in a locale I know well.

While setting may sometimes seem trivial, it can make or create the tension needed to move the story on. I thought more about my own writing as I read this chapter. The setting is key in A Shot of Jack. And, my unfamiliarity with the setting causes the tension that creates action and moves the character and the story to a climax. I hadn't thought about that before.

Where are you in your writing? Is your setting a backdrop for your story or an integral part? Is there an odd fact that you can play with to bring your setting to life? It's your writing...play a little and see what happens.

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Beginning and Endings


Beginning and Endings
“I think the end is implicit in the beginning. It must be.
If that isn’t there in the beginning, you don’t know what
you’re working toward. You should have a sense of
 a story’s shape and form and its destination,
all of which is like a flower inside a seed.”
-       Eudora Welty (pg. 93)

I know school is officially DONE when I begin to read for me. I love to read, but I have become a very picky reader. I won’t read just anything – even when on the beach. Time is precious, and books are plentiful. What does this have to do with beginnings and endings? Everything.
I need the beginning to be powerful, to draw me into the story, the characters, the plot. I need to connect quickly, or you lose me. And when I reach the end, I need to feel – something, anything – just don’t leave me with a neutral emotion.
My favorite writer is John Irving. I come back to him often because of what he accomplishes as a writer. Somehow this man can begin a book, and 400 pages later, end the book with almost the same words applied to a new situation and it all works and has meaning. Consider A Widow for A Year and the “It’s only Eddie, dear” that begins the tumultuous relationship between mother and daughter, and brings the relationship back together at the end of the book. Or A Prayer for Meany. I could go on.
As you consider beginning and endings, what strikes your fancy? What book beginnings and endings do you hold onto? A writer is first a reader and reads to hone his/her craft.  Tells us about your favorites and how they influence your writing.

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Writing Prompts for Chapters 5 and 6

Chapter 5: Creating a Character

When Garth Stein, author of The Art of Racing in the Rain, came to our school last October, one of his many thoughts about writing concerned "the job." He said, "When you're a writer, you're never off duty." You have to always be on the look out for something to happen, to use, to add." This particular piece of advice applies to many elements of writing, but I see it as particularly pertinent to that of creating character. How do you see the relationship between observation and creating character? What do you do in your classroom, or can you see yourself doing in the classroom that will help your students develop character. This can also be looked at as details, significance and ramifications of events, etc...

Chapter 6: Voice

Ahh, voice. Probably the most difficult to define of all the facets of writing. Well, voice and style... Anyway, Fletcher says, "When I talk about voice, I mean written words that carry with them a sense that someone has actually written them. Not a committee, not a computer: a single human being" (68). When you think of voice and what you've read in Fletcher, what thoughts or nuggets have you pulled out or created for your own discussions of voice in writing?

Sunday, June 2, 2013

What a Writer Needs - Chapters 3 and 4

Please consider the following prompts from the two chapters and respond to at least one of them.

Chapter 3: A Love of Words

Considering your own practice with vocabulary, whether it be content-specific or more general in nature, how do you come to learn words? What words do you know that you wouldn't know unless you came into contact with them in some special way? How can you help your students come to know words in the same, natural way that you came to know them?

Chapter 4: The Art of Specificity

"The bigger the issue, the smaller you write," is one of Fletcher's main points in this chapter. How might you help your students learn that concept. For example, this past September I had a student who wanted to describe and "adventurous" wedding she had attended. During the week-long celebration in the islands, they went ziplining, hang-gliding and deep-sea fishing, yet she would only describe it as "awesome." How have you helped your students, or how do you see helping your students get from "awesome" to "the swordfish, its tether a millimeter thick, leapt from the water with it's own determination to free itself from my determination to haul him in."