Category Archives: Re-visioning Memoir

Re-Launching a Memoir in the Digital Book Age: A Guest Post by Laura Dennis

A guest post by Laura Dennis/@LauraDennisCA posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler

 

“Revision is one of the exquisite pleasures of writing.” Bernard Malamud

 

I am very pleased to feature Memoirist Laura Dennis again in this guest post on re-launching her memoir, Adopted Reality. My book reviews are on Amazon  and Goodreads.

Laura has been here twice before with these popular posts : “Why I Chose to Write a Memoir as Opposed to Fiction” and “Reflections on  Trauma in Memoir: A 9/11 Tribute.”  This week, she shares her journey of  revising her memoir in the Digital Age of publishing

Welcome back, Laura!

Memoir Author Laura Dennis
Memoir Author Laura Dennwith

 

 

All authors revise; we want to, and we have to. Our writing–if it is to be more than a personal journal–is meant to be read.

 

Before this “New Age of Digital Publishing,” a book was a book was a book. Once it was printed, on paper … pretty much, that-was-that. Publishers would not agree to a new edition mere months after the first one, just so the author could add a few bits. It was cost-prohibitive and generally, simply not done.

 

All of that has changed. Whether or not we call it a new edition, a re-release, or reprinting, authors are able to tweak their ebooks. Even paperbacks can be updated with relative ease, given the availability of print-on-demand. I use Createspace, for example.

 

When I first published Adopted Reality, a Memoir, I wanted it proofread and coherent, a good story … but I also wanted it out there. I wanted to be a published author, come hell or high-water. I did absolutely NO pre-launch marketing, social networking, what have you. I had my priorities, and yes, initial sales suffered for it.

 

Revision. Re-vision. Discovering a new vision.

 

For this re-launch of the 2nd Edition of my memoir, I had two purposes.

First, I knew I needed to “beef up” the endorsements in the front. I needed back matter. I needed “social media outlets” such as links to Twitter, Facebook and my blog.

I wanted a way to get readers engaged, to keep them as readers–of my blog and of future books. All of that was fairly straight-forward extremely daunting. It required healthy doses of gumption and legwork.

 

The second, and I would have to say, even more difficult purpose was to revise the memoir itself. I received feedback from readers that they wondered “if I’d made it” ... As in, following my 2001 bipolar breakdown, was I able to remain (relatively) sane and out of the hospital? If yes, then–how did I actually go about recovering?

 

Darn it, to heck, I thought. Let’s be honest. I may have used more evocative four-letter words.

 

I don’t know the answer to this. Long-term recovery from a bipolar breakdown is not easy, and I can’t say that I’m completely “cured.” That’s simply not how it works, at least for me. Learning to manage my depression, mania, hypomania, and something I’m only know recognizing as “mixed states”–well, it’s a huge job. I don’t have many insights.

 

Seriously, writing about my recovery … over the last twelve years? That’s fodder for a whole additional book, and I may need a degree in psychology to figure it all out!

 

The elusive “satisfying ending”

 

How I went about discussing my recovery to give readers not only a satisfying ending, but also some knowledge about living with bipolar disorder … it took time to figure out.

 

I wanted Adopted Reality to continue to exist as a “slice of life” memoir. The fantastical elements of my mental breakdown needed to have a beginning, middle and end. This can be one of the hardest aspects of memoir–finding an ending that feels complete and adequate for the reader … when the main character has a whole lot of life left to live!

 

Even so, the reader feedback was sound, especially because it came from fellow memoirists! I needed to give more details about how I struggled after being released from the mental hospital, how I succeeded in earning an MFA from a prestigious dance program, as a scholarship student who should otherwise be at the top of her dancing career. [If only it weren’t for this pesky mental illness.] This early recovery aspect needed to be shown with its attendant relapses and setbacks, warts-and-all.

 

I had to admit to myself was that while writing about delusions was fun and interesting; chronicling the arduous path to stability and sanity was decidedly not. The two years following my descent into madness were some of the most difficult times of my life. While I was supposed to be living my dream in California–reunited with my first mom, pursuing my love of dance–I was broken and beaten-down, physically, emotionally and spiritually.

 

But, I did it.

 

I sat down and I forced the writing out of me. I believe the 2nd edition of Adopted Reality is a better memoir for it. I’ve learned so much in the last year from other memoirists, such as Kathy Pooler, and from a social network of writers, fellow adoptees, and bloggers. Kathy was one of the first non-family-members who validated that my memoir was what she called, “a stunning psychological thriller.”

 

Beyond mere revision, this too is the power of the online digital age–connecting with kindred spirits, finding meaning in our own writing lives, and sharing that knowledge with others.

 

*  *  *

 

Laura Dennis was adopted in New Jersey, raised in Maryland, and learned how to be a (sane) person in California. A professionally trained dancer, Laura also worked as sales director for a biotech startup. With two children under the age of three, in 2010 she and her husband sought to simplify their lifestyle and escaped to his hometown, Belgrade, Serbia. While the children learned Serbian in their cozy preschool, Laura recovered from sleep deprivation and wrote Adopted Reality, a Memoir, available on Amazon.

 

She currently blogs at Expat (Adoptee) Mommy. Connect with her on twitter @LauraDennisCA, or email laura@adoptedrealitymemoir.com.

 

Adopted Reality , 2nd edition, Book Cover
Adopted Reality , 2nd edition, Book Cover

 

Thank you, Laura for sharing your memoir writer’s journey with us and for showing us how writing is rewriting.  I appreciate how you kept your reader in mind as you revised.

 

Laura will give a copy of her memoir to a commenter whose name will be selected in a random drawing.

 

How about you? What makes you decide to  revise what you have written? Do you ask for reader feedback? As a reader, what makes you want to keep turning the pages of a book?

 

We’d love to hear from you. Please leave your comments below~

 

 

Next Week: Memoir Author  Nancy Stephan, The Truth About Butterflies, will discuss Narrative Medicine: ” A Tale of Two Men and a Four-letter Word.”

 

Re-visioning Memoir: An Interview with Linda Joy Myers

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler

” We don’t know who we are until we see what we can do” Martha Grimes, Writer’s Handbook

I am very happy to welcome back Linda Joy Myers in this interview to discuss the recent launch of her re-visioned memoir, Don’t Call Me Mother: A Daughter’s Journey From Abandonment to Forgiveness and the healing journey she took to  reveal the story that needed to be revisited. My reviews can be found on Amazon and Goodreads.

Welcome back, Linda Joy!

Linda Joy Myers,PhD
Linda Joy Myers,PhD

 

KP: I find it fascinating that the memoir you wrote seven years ago seemed to beckon you to return to it. In your updated version of your memoir, Don’t Call Me Mother, you take us deeper into your story of being abandoned by your mother and reflect on the impact that has on you and your family today. What made you decide to expand on your original memoir rather than write a separate memoir- the same title with a different subtitle?

 

LJM: I spent about 10 years writing this memoir, beginning two decades ago. The story of my mother and grandmother, the tangled threads, research on Ancestry.com and the way it still fascinates me is like a kind of addiction—I could be tempted to keep going over the same territory if I wrote a whole new book about them. I want to write about men and my father next, and I want to publish my WWII novel. I felt the stories in the Afterword were really important to work on and share as part of the original story, as they loop back to the themes. I continued my journey with the material in Don’t Call Me Mother without getting lost in the story. I’m trying to move forward!

 

KP:  Since a memoir reflects a slice of your life defined by a specific time period, it makes sense that one’s story does change over time. What are the main factors that led to your decision to go deeper into your story?

 

LJM: In one story, I pick up the thread of my time with Vera, the year I’m alone in a home that was abusive and scary. In 2003, I decided to face the shadowy fears that had stayed with me all my life and I met her children again for the first time since I was five, a skinny, sick, and frightened child. I hoped that by doing so I’d stop having the bad dreams that could still haunt me. Through meeting them, I learned about my own courage, and how we can find a new perspective through living—and writing beyond the original wounds. I learned about forgiveness—it’s a gift, and we don’t always plan it. My point is to show how we can continue to learn from our stories, and if we share this new knowledge, we can help others understand more deeply the power of transformation that we can manifest in our lives.

 

KP:  In your updated version, you take us through your painstaking process of healing, especially facing your relatives, in a way that makes the reader feel the pain of rejection. What advice would you give others who are facing painful realities as they write their memoir?

 

LJM: Well, first we have to find ways to bear the grief and sorrow that come when we get a shock of recognition about “the way things are,” and how different they are than we wanted them to be. In the second story in the Afterword, I find out that the Iowa extended family, whom I’d seen as a buffer and a way to have some kind of family, judged the fact that I wrote a memoir, and further, they were a bit paranoid about what I wrote—and didn’t write—about them. In a moment of insight during an intense encounter, I saw how much of an outsider I was. My grandmother never “belonged” in that family—she had a different father than her 6 brothers and sisters—he died before she was born. She moved to the big city of Chicago, and took ships to England. My mother was always hysterical and “eccentric.” And I lived in that crazy state of California, I was a therapist, I too went to England, but not on ships! And I was always poking around to find out more about the history of the family. When you grow up with people who lie all the time, the truth has premium value—at least to me. In that insightful moment when I finally see that I’m an outsider, that we always were, and that I’d left out truths in the first version of the memoir so I could preserve this family connection, I was stabbed with grief. I cried and cried as I bathed my feet for the last time in the Mississippi River, as I sat in the rain by my mother’s grave and drove by the houses where I’d spent my childhood summers. The grief, the insight, and the falling away of denial freed me from my false beliefs and the need to pretend who I was or wasn’t. Finally, I was myself and that was good enough. I thought it was an important, and vulnerable, story to share.

 

KP: You teach weaving the light and dark moments in and you do that very well throughout this memoir, leaving the reader with a sense of hope in healing despite the reality of the circumstances. In the end, you share a powerful message of not only forgiveness for those who have hurt you but also self-forgiveness. What role did writing this version play in achieving this forgiveness?

 

LJM: Even though I’ve taught writing as healing all these years since the first edition was done, I’m still amazed and moved by how powerful writing the truth is! Again, with memoir, we’re living the story and while we’re living it, we’re also trying to find ways to put language around it, finding the scenes that can capture in some small way how it is for us. I wrote several versions of these stories but it helps to have time between the event and the writing. My later versions were much better! But the story about me and my daughter I wrote right after we lived it because I didn’t want to forget one single thing that happened. When she read it she said, “Yes, that’s what happened that day.” What a blessing! It was a full circle between us, mother and daughter. We are the first in several generations to share our love freely, have sincere even if difficult talks without angry outbursts—at least most of the time—and my grand-daughter is growing up without abandonment fears. I’m happy!

 

KP: It seems to me that writing this version has been a gift to yourself and your family. You write in your preface, “It is a testament to my belief that, under all the hurt and anger, love is buried deep inside each person.” This insight is also a gift to your reader. When in your writing process did you realize that your story was transformational both for yourself and your reader? Did it evolve as you wrote or were you clear from the start that your message would have the potential to help others as well as yourself?

 

LJM: Just like the saying, “No tears in the writer, no tears in the reader,” if we feel transformed and are able to present the evidence in scenes and use language to shape feelings and perceptions, then the reader will feel it too. It’s a writing challenge then, to keep shaping and choosing and smoothing until it’s seamless. I have seen the power of writing to heal the writer and the reader so often that it’s a given in my world.

 

KP:  Thank you, Linda Joy, for sharing your thoughts on how re-visioning your memoir led you to a deeper level of healing.

Your mantra, “Be brave.Write your story” is captured in your memoir.

 

 

Wheat fields at night
Wheat fields at night

 

Author’s Bio:

Linda Joy Myers, Ph.D., MFA, is the President and founder of the National Association of Memoir Writers, an Instructor at Writers Digest, Co-President of the Women’s National Book Association, San Francisco branch. Linda is the author of The Power of Memoir—How to Write Your Healing StoryBecoming Whole, and Don’t Call Me Mother, which won the BAIPA Gold Medal prize. Linda’s next book is Truth or Lie: On the Cusp of Memoir and Fiction. She gives workshops through NAMW, Story Circle, and the Therapeutic Writing Institute, and helps people capture their stories through coaching and online workshops. www.namw.org.  Blog: http://memoriesandmemoirs.com; Twitter @memoirguru

Her re-visioned memoir can be ordered on Amazon:

 

Don't Call Me Mother Book Cover, 2013
Don’t Call Me Mother Book Cover, 2013

 

How about you? Have you written a memoir that you need to revisit? How do you feel about reading a re-visioned memoir?

Linda Joy will give away a copy of her memoir to a random commenter.

 

We’d love to hear your thoughts. Please leave your comments below~

 

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 This week: I’m also for at Cheryl Stahle’s blog, Your Best Writing Group with a memoir vignette “Summer Day Along the Hudson River…Nothing Quite Like It” as part of her March Memoir Madness series.

 

 Next Week: Memoir Author Lorenzo Martinez will discuss his upcoming memoir about participating in the Operation Pedro Pan project of the 1960s.