What Do Writers Read? A Guest Post by Memoir Author Belinda Nicoll

A guest post by Belinda Nicoll/@BelindaNicoll

“Either write something worth reading or do something worth writing.” Benjamin Franklin

I am very pleased to feature Freelance Writer, Memoir Author and Creativity Coach Belinda Nicoll in this guest post. Belinda and I met in Sonia Marsh‘s Gutsy Indie Publisher Facebook group. She blogs about creative writing, the changing world of books and publishing and offers a series of rite-of-passages stories by guest writers. Her current series, What is the Gist of Your Story, features guest bloggers who discuss how the premise and themes of their books can be the basis of effective book publicity.

Her favorite topics are personal transformation and global change. Here are my reviews of her memoir, Out of Sync on Amazon and Goodreads. She is currently working on a novel.

We are told that in order to be a good writer, we need to be a good reader. Belinda shares her thoughts on how her writing process has influenced her reading habits and then how her habits have changed.

Welcome Belinda!

 

Author and Creativity Coach Belinda Nicoll
Author and Creativity Coach Belinda Nicoll

As a cognitive process, reading is a means of acquiring knowledge; it’s a complex interaction between the nature of the content—informative, educational, persuasive, entertaining—and the objectives of the reader. When you read, you bring your attitudes, skills, values and beliefs to the experience; if you approach a text with an open mind, it’s likely you’ll feel changed in some way when you get to the end of the book; but if you’re set in your ways, certain content might make you feel uncomfortable or even bring about a dislike of the author.

 

After I started writing my memoir, Out of Sync, I was unable to read for pleasure. I had work to do—stepping into my student shoes, I plowed through creative writing guides, absorbing the do’s and don’ts of memoir-writing. I read other memoirs to emulate the style of writers I admire: Alexandra Fuller, Jeanette Walls, Frank McCourt, Joan Connor, and many more. I read news reports about the economic growth in post-apartheid South Africa to make sure I get my facts right in describing how the changes there caught my husband and I off-guard after our expatriation to the U.S. in 2001. I read world news to stay abreast of globalization, one of the themes of my memoir and a concept a lot of Americans were still in denial about. I read forecasts about the world economy; we could relate to predictions of rising inflation in the U.S., because we’d been through it in South Africa and were recognizing the signs. I cried every time I read a story about people who’d lost loved ones in the 9/11 disaster—it wasn’t easy writing the chapter of my memoir that deals with our arrival at JFK International Airport on that fateful day. I read and made notes; I read and jotted down references; I read and edited my memoir, again, and again.

 

Until recently, long after the completion of my memoir, I’ve been the worst novel reader imaginable—I could not read even a chapter without dissecting the text and noting (for instance):

  • if the protagonist, antagonist, and others are represented as flat or multi-dimensional characters;
  • if point of view is that of the narrator’s or if the story is told from first-, second-, or omniscient perspective;
  • how setting is used in providing a historical or cultural context for the characters;
  • if dialogue is stilted or natural, or if it’s (mis)used as information dump;
  • if the plot abides by the prescribed structure of the book’s genre;
  • if the author is making use of special literary devices such as back-story, cliffhangers, flashbacks, or letter and emails (parts of my memoir are told in epistolary style as I inserted certain email exchanges between me and my family).

 

I had turned into such a critical reader that my husband complained, saying “Please do not tell me what you think of that book or its author until I’ve read it.” When I started selling my published memoir, my reading shifted to the how-to topics of book publicity. Slowly, I started reading novels for relaxation again; and now, when I read the memoirs of my peers with the intention of posting a review for them, I manage to ‘go with the flow’ and concentrate on how the story makes me feel rather than attempt to critique it. I’ve even joined a book club again, and even though the other members seem a little dazzled by having an author in their midst, Im trying to act like a reader and not a writer.

 

Having said that, I’m currently working on my first novel, so I’ve got books strewn all over the house in preparation for research: Cults In Our Midst by M.T. Singer, Monster by A. Hall, The Great Anglo-Boer War by Farwell…of course, I’m doing my best to ignore my husband, who’s shaking his head, mumbling, “There we go again…”

 

Bio

Belinda is a freelance writer, indie author, and creativity coach. She blogs about issues related to writing and creativity, as well as her favorite subject: change. Her memoir, Out of Sync, is available online at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Kobo, Smashwords, and Kalahari (South Africa). You can follow Belinda at Facebook, LinkedIn, or Twitter.

"Out of Sync" Book Cover
“Out of Sync” Book Cover

 

Thank you , Belinda for showing us how the writing process has influenced your reading habits. I know that once I started writing, I started reading books differently, with an eye out for what works and what doesn’t. You bring up a good point though about getting back to reading for the pure enjoyment of being immersed in a story.

 

How about you? Have your reading habits changed since you started writing?

 

We’d love to hear from you. Belinda will be giving away a free copy of her memoir, Out of Sync, to a random commenter so please leave your comments below~

 

 

Next Week: “Lessons I’ve Learned About Revising My Memoir-In-Progress” on March 4 followed by “Re-visioning Memoir: An Interview with Linda Joy Myers” on March 7.

Preserving My Dad’s Stories: A Memoir Moment

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler

“What a father says to his children is not heard by the world, but it will be heard by posterity.” Jean Paul Richter

I was blessed with a remarkable father, Bob, whom I looked up to my entire life. He died in 2010 leaving our family with a legacy of love and wise guidance.

Dad shows up a lot in my memoir; the symbol of strength and wisdom, the voice of reason, the calm in the storm.

Eight months before he died, I interviewed him. Typically, a man of few words, he spewed out a litany of stories on that day.

The man I adored and admired, my hero, was once a little boy with stories of his own.

Raw Beginnings

A blonde-haired four-year-old boy named Bob rides his scooter down the sidewalk, stopping to avoid the raised ruts. He squints to shield his sad blue eyes from the scorching sun, stopping to brush the thick shocks of hair from his forehead. Soon, he will be whisked off to a children’s home, along with his older brother, Dick and his older sisters, Ruth and Eleanor as their father works as a traveling salesman during the Depression. Their beloved mother, Edna Mae, is suddenly gone. Ruth recalled years later that Edna Mae suffered from blinding headaches until one day at the age of thirty-three, she died of a stroke, leaving Paul, her husband, to care for his four children. Bob, my father, was the youngest. Gathering them close in his magical sway, Paul reached out his loving arms and taught them to say,”All for one. One for all”, a refrain they would remember and live by their whole lives.

 A visit to the children's home by Grandpa Paul (R) and Uncle George & Aunt Rennie From L to R: Dick(12), Dad (6),El (8)  & Ruth (10). 1928
A visit to the children’s home by Grandpa Paul (R) and Uncle George & Aunt Rennie From L to R: Dick(12), Dad (6),El (8) & Ruth (10). 1928

A strong, young father had vowed to protect them all from his deep pain and loss; a loss that sent waves into the next generation.

“I never understood how my buddies could be so rude to their mothers.” Dad would say,”Their mothers would bake cookies and greet them after school. I would have done anything to have my mother back.”

At the children’s home, he recalled cold, lumpy oatmeal and being bullied by the older kids. One day on the playground while playing baseball, some older kids surrounded him, taunting him about the knickers he was forced to wear. Dick, his designated protector, came to his rescue as he did many times before and after. The brothers shared a mutual respect and close relationship for their entire lives as did all the siblings.

And Dad could never eat oatmeal, often relaying his experience,

”Makes me gag and reminds me of the children’s home.”

Dad recalled his excitement the day his father brought him a box of chocolates for Valentine’s Day. He couldn’t wait to take it back to his room and savor the treats at his leisure. But the matron had other ideas. She felt it was only right that this treat be shared with all the children as others were not so lucky as to have a father to bring such a nice surprise. Excitement turned to disappointment as he watched his treasured box of chocolates get divvied up among the group. That does explain why he savored sweets in later years. In fact, one dared not get between him and his dessert, especially if it was homemade chocolate pie.

The children were released from the home one by one, starting with Dick. Soon my father was the only one in the home. He missed his siblings but looked forward to the day he would leave. He was twelve when he left and recalled a happy day filled with hugs when he arrived in their home in Schenectady, New York. Dick was six years older than Dad and had joined the Army. When he came home on leave, he and Dad played hours of tennis, getting up at dawn before the hot sun started beating down. Dad recalled that they would often wrestle. Dick would establish dominance, while grinding his fist into my Dad’s temple; brotherly love at its finest. He missed Dick’s playful banter and the trading of outrageous puns among the siblings.

Ruth, four years older, was the surrogate Mom, cooking, cleaning and doting over her mischievous brother while their father worked as a traveling salesman for a printing company to support them. Soon after Dad was discharged from the home, Paul moved them to Upper Darby, Philadelphia to find work. He would be out of town during the week and home on the weekends.

One Friday afternoon, Paul drove up with a strange woman.

“Meet your new mother.” He said as they walked in the side door.

Shock and disbelief registered in Dad’s twelve-year-old mind. Lydia was forty-years-old, a spinster by 1934 standards, when she married Paul. She didn’t understand the workings of a twelve-year-old boy on the edge of his coming of age. Her stoic German personality was in sharp contrast to a young man who was trying to make his way in a world of uncertainty. While he fought the bullies in the school yard, he balked at the stern limits set in his new household. He was a rebel in the making, sneaking off to smoke his first cigarettes behind the garage and developing an ever sharp edge to combat his fears and longings.

But his new stepmother was a wonderful baker and he loved her Apple Streusel.

For all her sternness, born out of her lack of mothering experience, she was a gentle lover of birds. Dad recalled his memories of their pet pigeon, Oscar, who would fly into Paul and Lydia’s bedroom and perch near Lydia’s head. When it was time to move back to Schenectady, New York, Oscar was placed in a wicker bird cage and set atop the children, suitcases and lampshades in the back seat of their 1930 Ford. Imagine their surprise when they found eggs in a nest. Oscar became Oscarina and soon after their arrival in their new home, she flew away. They later found out that Oscarina returned to Upper Darby, perched on Paul and Lydia’s bedroom window sill.

Dad was fourteen and full of himself when he moved back to New York. His edges kept sharpening as he found himself on new ground once again. I look at the picture of my fourteen-year-old father, tall and handsome with a shock of light brown hair, reaching down to pet Spiffy, their beloved Huskie and wonder what he was thinking and feeling at that moment.

In two years, as a junior in high school, he would meet Kathryn DiCerbo, a sophomore, in the hallway at school. She would secretly decide on that day that he would become her husband. He didn’t know it then that she would become “the woman of his dreams” and his life would be forever changed; the deep longing in his heart would be filled with the love and laughter of a big Italian family who would embrace him with open hearts. He would be welcomed into the fold and honored like the Prodigal Son. Let the feast begin; a lost son has returned.

Dad and Mom, 1944 on their first wedding anniverary
Dad and Mom, 1944 on their first wedding anniverary

And the sharp edges would melt away… (to be continued)

 

 

Dad & Mom in 2005
Dad & Mom in 2005

How about you? Do you have stories of your loved ones that you want to preserve?

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

 

Announcement: Congratulations, Susan Rowland. You are the winner of Andrea Lewis’ memoir, Dramaville is Not a Place; It’s a State of Mind.

 

This week: I am also over at Belinda Nicoll’s My Rite of Passage blog with a guest post on her “What is the Gist of Your Story?” series with My Memoir-in-Progress.

 

Next week : Memoir Author and Creativity Coach, Belinda Nicoll will discuss “What Do Writers Read?” She will give away a copy of her memoir, Out of Sync to a random commenter.

 

 

Writing My Memoir Helped Me Find True Love: A Valentine Guest Post by Memoir Author Andrea Lewis

A Guest Post by Andrea Lewis/@dredrelew

“Whatever it takes to break your heart and wake you up is grace”Mark Matousek, Sex Death Enlightenment: A True Story

"Valentine Heart" by Caraman/dreamstimefree
“Valentine Heart” by Caraman/dreamstimefree

I am very pleased to feature Memoir Author Andrea Lewis in this guest post on finding self-love. I can’t think of a better time to discuss self-love than during the week of Valentine’s Day.

Andrea and I met during a #JournalChatLive on Twitter with host Dawn Herring. We have been following one another ever since. Her memoir is filled with drama, emotional turmoil and an inspiration to never give up. Here are my reviews of Andrea’s memoir, Dramaville is Not a Place;It’s a State of Mind on Amazon, Goodreads and Smashwords.

Welcome , Andrea!

Memoir Author Andrea Lewis
Memoir Author Andrea Lewis

The last thing I need to let go of is my job.

This was my journal entry on August, 15, 2010. I was having a week from hell at the Office and I was completely fed up, not only in my professional life but my personal life.

I had just spent the last three years in a toxic relationship that regurgitated my past. It resulted in me severing ties with the guy as well as with my family. I “thought” I had finally tossed my emotional baggage to the curb.

Yet I was still unhappy.

Two weeks later after my journal entry, I was meditating and I heard a whisper: you need to write your story. I was not exactly thrilled about it and I vowed that there was no way, no how I was going to exhume the past again.

But God works in mysterious ways.

Shortly after my epiphany I had some friends over and one of my friends randomly said, “I think you should write a book.” The following day something within me awakened and my muse came to life.

I had no outline or even any idea what exactly I was going to write about my story. I just happened to start in the middle of my life and from that point on, the words kept flowing and I was flooded with a slew of memories.

What I did not anticipate was how my life turned topsy-turvy. The Office politics seemed amplified, long-standing friendships were being rattled, and I was being stalked by my ex-boyfriend. I was physically, mentally and spiritually drained.

The past thirty-nine years of my roller-coaster life was finally catching up to me and months into writing my memoir, I went on stress-leave from my job.

It was time for me to heal from the self-destructive path I had been on that included a cycle with broken relationships, partying, excessive drinking and binge eating.

I also confronted my childhood trauma of sexual and physical abuse I endured at the hands of my half-brother. I revisited my brother’s suicide as well as unresolved issues from my divorce.

But I didn’t do it alone.

Thankfully I had regular appointments with my therapist and weekly coffee dates with a friend. I journaled daily, I meditated, practiced yoga and walked outdoors in nature. I also screamed in frustration, cried and punched pillows in order to channel the intense emotions I experienced.

Though therapeutic, there were numerous times I wanted to give up, but I didn’t. I believed in healing myself, I was going to help others by sharing my story. Most importantly I learned some very valuable lessons: self-love, self-acceptance and to take responsibility for my life, instead of blaming others for my unhappiness.

In the end, I stopped trying to escape from the woman looking back at me in the mirror and found my one true love. It was me all along.

All I had to do was love me and honor my soul.

Dramaville Book Cover
Dramaville Book Cover

Dramaville may be ordered here.

Giveaway: The name of a random commenter will be picked to win a free copy of Andrea’s memoir Dramaville on Sunday 2/17. The winner will be notified via email.

Biography

Andrea Lewis is the founder of Independently Fine, a website offering motivational quotes geared to empowering women and for men who embrace them.

She has guest blogged her story on the Spirited Woman website and her inspirational message has been featured in the Wild Sister e-magazine.

Andrea Lewis lives in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. Connect with Andrea at http://www.andreamlewis.com, on Twitter@dredrelew, Andrea Lewis-Author Facebook page, Pinterest,Goodreads.

 

 

Thank you , Andrea, for sharing how writing your memoir has helped you to find your one true love, yourself. Your story inspires us all to write our way to self-love. I also appreciate how journaling through your experiences helped you get started on writing your story.

On this Valentine’s Day, 2013, may we all take a lead from Andrea and find our own self-love.

heart/ flickr creative commons
heart/ flickr creative commons

 

How about you? Has writing helped you to understand, accept and and love yourself?

 

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

 

This Week: I’m also over at Belinda Nicoll’s blog My Rite of Passage with a guest post on her “Finding the Gist of Your Story Series: My Memoir-In -Progress”

 

Next Week: “Preserving My Dad’s Stories: A Memoir Moment”

Journal to Memoir: Planting the Seeds for Story

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler

“The nicest part is being able to write down all my thoughts and feelings, otherwise I might suffocate.” Anne Frank from The Diary of a Young Girl: The Definitive Edition.

It all started with the pink diary I received for my eleventh birthday. It had a key so I could lock away all my deepest secrets, like what boy I had a crush on in the sixth grade or all the fun I had at the girl scout camping trip even though those half-cooked hot dogs made me yearn for home.

I could write whatever I was thinking and feeling and nobody would ever know.

Now I am writing a memoir and the whole world will know what I am thinking and feeling. I can’t help but ponder how the transition- from guarding my thoughts with a lock and key to sharing my inner and outer story so openly- happened.

For me, it happened through journaling…

I have journaled for years and never realized that all those times I had poured out my feelings onto the pages of my journal , I was planting the seeds for my memoir.

I still have the blue cloth, three-ring notebook that I created for my senior English teacher, Miss Philips back in 1964. The page dividers have pictures depicting the sections: hopes, beliefs, thoughts, ideas with varied colored plastic tabs where the white labels were inserted.

At the time, it seemed like a silly project. What did Miss Philips know? I can still see her, pencil-thin frame, always dressed in some dark-colored–grey, navy blue or black–dowdy dress or suit. Standing so straight by her desk, she never smiled or wore makeup. Her brown hair was pulled back in a tight bun and her wire-rimmed glasses dangled at the end of her nose.

What in the world would I ever do with that silly notebook?

My First Journal
My First Journal

 

I packed the journal when I went to nursing school and every once in a while, I’d pull it out to glance through the sections. Sometimes, I’d even jot a few thoughts down. For the most part, it lay dormant.

But, as I began my career and started out on my path to contribute to society as an adult, the pages started beckoning me.

It turned out that I did plenty with Miss Philips’s notebook and if I had the chance, I would thank her for the gift of that handmade journal which provided me with a framework to fill in my life story. What started out as an assumption in my adolescent mind that my out-of-touch teacher was wasting my time became a slowly evolving admiration for a teacher who made a lasting difference in my life…

She planted a seed that has bloomed over and over again as I have worked my way through my life challenges.

Without realizing it at the time, I was planting the seeds for my life story.

 

I have journaled through the heartaches of relationship failures, the searing pain of divorce, the loneliness and exhaustion of being a single parent, the terror of dealing with an alcoholic son, the heart wrenching losses of my maternal grandmother, Nan and my best friend, Judy, my own diagnosis of cancer and the illness and death of my beloved father.

The seed journal has spawned many spiral notebooks and decorative journals to accommodate my evolving thoughts and feelings; to capture my moments of need, longing, passion, creativity, my life…the moments that will matter in my memoir.

The journal tells its own story.

*The pages sit blank and patient just waiting to receive my words. As the words fall on the page, the emotions get sorted out. There is something about labeling a feeling that helps to put it into perspective.

*The feelings that grip and gouge on the inside take on a different shape on the outside.

*Knowledge is power and when one becomes clear with one’s own feelings, there is a sense of empowerment.

*When I journaled my way through my father’s 11-day illness and death, I found clarity and solace in my own words. In sharing my deepest, heartfelt grief, I received support and love in return.

Journaling has become my pathway to healing and hope and has helped me to recall, relive and reflect upon the moments and times of my life that will make up my memoir.

Thank you Miss Philips for helping me plant the seeds that have yielded a garden of stories for my memoir.

Look what is growing in my garden
Look what ‘s growing in my garden.

Here are a few journaling resources I recommend:

Amber Lea Starfire, writer and journaling mentor offers journaling prompts and writing tips through her Writing Through Life website, “helping you find meaning in life through the act of writing.

Kay Adams, a pioneer of journal therapy and author of Journal to Self hosts a radio show, Journaling for a Better Life.

Dawn Herring of JournalWriter Freelance and author of The Birthday Wall: Creating a Collage to Celebrate Your Child, hosts a weekly Twitter chat at #JournalChat where she features topics from journal writers. Thursdays 2:00 PM PST.

Julie Cameron, award-winning poet, playwright, filmmaker and author of thirty books, is best known for her work on creativity. One of her books, The Artist’s Way helped spawn a” movement that has enabled millions to achieve their creative dreams”

 

On February 23,2013,I will be co-facilitating a workshop in Exton,Pa, Journaling: A Voyage of Self-Discovery ,with Susan Weidener of The Women’s Writing Circle. If you are in the Philadelphia area, we’d love to have you join us.

 

How about you? Do you journal? If so, has it helped you find your story? I’d love to hear from you.

Please share your comments below~

 

Announcement: Congratulations to Debra Marrs. Your name was selected in a random drawing of commenters to receive Pamela Richards’ memoir, Singing from Silence!

 

Next Week: Just in time for Valentine’s Day, Memoir Author Andrea Lewis will discuss “Writing My Memoir Helped Me Find True Love.” She will give away a copy of her memoir, Dramaville: It’s not a Place; It’s a State of Mind to a random commenter.