Tag Archives: Linda Joy Myers

Wow! Women on Writing Blog Tour: Times They Were A-Changing Anthology: Women Remember the 60s and 70s

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler with @womensmemoir60s

 

I am very pleased to participate in this Wow! Women on Writing Blog Tour for the Times They Were A-Changing: Women Remember the ’60s and 70’s anthology with a guest post by Merimee Moffit. Merimee is the Winner, First Honorable Mention, Poetry.

She will discuss how what we learned in the ’60s and ’70s is important for women today.

 

Welcome, Merimee!

 

MerimeeMoffitt
Merrimee Moffitt

 

 

 

“How What We Learned in the ‘60s and ‘70s is Important to Women Today?”

 

The anthology, Times They Were A-Changing: Women Remember the ‘60s & ‘70s, encourages younger women who are now the age we were back in the Times to not stop, not give up, to listen to their own inner voice, and if need be, to shout it out!

Many of the writers tell about shedding the “Shoulds” they had been burdened with and moving into a new way of prioritizing their own needs.

The story, “Proud Spinster,” reveals the barriers to home-owning and child-bearing for a single woman, but Patricia Vestal, the author, proudly outlines her successes while going it solo.

 

In my poem, “Before the Summer of Love,” I write about an almost romance as a potential career move, simultaneously poking fun at the sanctity of a marriage I’d never witnessed. I, as the voice in the poem, had foregone many “Shoulds” to revel in the bliss of my lover’s body and to twine with him in our meandering search. I write about a “dizzying search for God,” but I couldn’t have defined it that way then.

 

The book gives evidence that as we live our lives honestly, not necessarily guided by “Shoulds,” but by our own integrity, we don’t know what lies ahead. Each story and poem focuses on a pivotal moment that contained the seed of a strong inner voice, a new way.

“Dispatches from the Heartland” shocks us when a father accuses his daughter of destroying his marriage and influencing his wife, violently attempting to re-impose his “Shoulds” upon her. Dorothy Alexander, the author, wanted to become a lawyer and her father felt threatened. This scenario is less and less frequent due to the brave women whose stories tell of facing down such confrontations.

 

The drug stories, “Tripping on High” and “Altamont,” give us a frightening truth with a wake-up call to young women today. Drug experiences were part of the Times; these two written by Venus Ann Maher and Amber Lea Starfire remind women that the survivors of the Times had to stand up for their right to be sober, had to fight the short-term “Should” about being stoned forever.

 

The writing in the anthology stresses the importance of women knowing that their own intuition is the healthiest guideline, not the “Shoulds” imposed generically upon a generation or a gender. No, you don’t have to be married, nor do you need to be the wildest at the party, nor do you have to follow a powerful guru.  Yes, rights can be removed and yes, you may, like your mothers and grandmothers, have to fight, even for rights you already have and may be taking for granted.

 

You are worth fighting for, these writers say, and your beliefs and efforts will bear fruit. Women’s history is just beginning to be scribed, valued, and studied.

 

Young women of today are living tomorrow’s history. It is up to each woman to add her mark, to tell her story, paint her visions, dance her dance. 

 

***

Thank you Merimee for capturing the essence of the stories in the anthology. My favorite line is “you are worth fighting for and your beliefs and efforts will bear fruit.” May the lessons of the ’60s and ’70s as relayed through your stories serve to guide young women today.

Author’s Bio:

Merimee Moffitt arrived in New Mexico in a shiny green Chrysler from Portland in 1970 and fell in love with the land, sun, culture—everything northern New Mexico. She stayed to raise her four children, has four grandkids now, a husband, and two dogs. She is semi-retired and currently co-hosts the only prose open mic in Albuquerque, Duke City Dime Stories (dimestories.org). She performs her poems and teaches workshops and classes in the community. Her poetry appears often in the fabulous reviews and journals in New Mexico such as Malpais Review, Mas Tequila Review, Adobe Walls, and the Santa Fe Literary Review. She received First Honorable Mention in the Times They Were A Changing anthology for her poem “Before the Summer of Love.” She has published three chapbooks and her first book, a collection of poems, Making Little Edens, is available at your favorite bookseller and on Amazon at http://www.amazon.com/Making-Little-Edens-Merimée-Moffitt/dp/1492881589/.

 

 ***

Just in time for the holidays,  anthology editors Linda Joy Myers, Kate Farrell and Amber Lea Starfire launch their anthology Times They Were A-Changing: Women Remember the ’60s and ’70s. The book is the perfect gift for opening discussions with friends and family members and illustrating what a powerful time the ’60s and ’70s truly were.

Kate, Amber and Linda Joy
Anthology Editors Kate Farrell, Amber Starfire and Linda Joy Myers

 

Anthology Synopsis:

Forty-eight powerful stories and poems etch in vivid detail breakthrough moments experienced by women during the life-changing era that was the ’60s and ’70s. These women rode the sexual revolution with newfound freedom, struggled for identity in divorce courts and boardrooms, and took political action in street marches. They pushed through the boundaries, trampled the taboos, and felt the pain and joy of new experiences.

And finally, here, they tell it like it was.

Through this collection of women’s stories, we celebrate the women of the ’60s and ’70s and the importance of their legacy.

 

Paperback: 354 pages

 

Publisher: She Writes Press (Sept. 8, 2013)

 

ISBN-10: 1938314042

 

ISBN-13: 978-1938314049

 

TimesTheyWereChanging_BkCovr
Times They Were A-Changing Book Cover

 

Times They Were A’Changing: Women Remember the ‘60s & ‘70s is available in print and as an e-book at Amazon, Barnes & Noble and She Writes Press and Indie Bound.

 

Find out more about the book online:

Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/TimesTheyWereAChanging

Times They Were A’Changing blog: http://www.timestheywereachanging.com

Twitter: @womensmemoir60s

 

About the Editors:

 

Linda Joy Myers is president and founder of the National Association of Memoir Writers, and the author of four books: Don’t Call Me Mother—A Daughter’s Journey from Abandonment to Forgiveness, The Power of Memoir—How to Write Your Healing Story, and a workbook The Journey of Memoir: The Three Stages of Memoir Writing. Her book Becoming Whole—Writing Your Healing Story was a finalist in ForeWord Magazine’s Book of the Year Award. A speaker and award-winning author, she co-teaches the program Write Your Memoir in Six Months, and offers editing, coaching, and mentoring for memoir, nonfiction, and fiction. www.namw.org. Visit her blog at http://memoriesandmemoirs.com.

 

Kate Farrell earned a M.A. from UC Berkeley; taught language arts in high schools, colleges, and universities; founded the Word Weaving storytelling project in collaboration with the California Department of Education with a grant from the Zellerbach Family Fund, and published numerous educational materials. She is founder of Wisdom Has a Voice memoir project and edited Wisdom Has a Voice: Every Daughter’s Memories of Mother (2011). Farrell is president of Women’s National Book Association, San Francisco Chapter, a board member of Redwood Branch of the California Writers Club, member of Story Circle Network and National Association of Memoir Writers.

 

Amber Lea Starfire, whose passion is helping others tell their stories, is the author of Week by Week: A Year’s Worth of Journaling Prompts & Meditations (2012) and Not the Mother I Remember, due for release in late 2013. A writing teacher and editor, she earned her MFA in Creative Writing from University of San Francisco and is a member of the California Writers Club in Napa and Santa Rosa, the Story Circle Network, National Association of Memoir Writers, and International Association for Journal Writing. In her spare time, she enjoys spending time outdoors. www.writingthroughlife.com.

 

How about you? If you “came of age” in the ’60s and ’70s, do you have any stories of your own?

If you are  older or younger,  do you have any thoughts on how the ’60s and ’70s shaped women’s lives?

 

A lucky commenter’s name will be selected in a random drawing to win a free copy of the Time They Were A-Changing anthology.

 

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

 

Next Week:

 

Monday, 12/16/13:  “Christmas Past: A  Memoir Moment.”

 

 

A Milestone in a Memoir Writer’s Journey: Are We There Yet?

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler

 

“We don’t receive wisdom; we must discover it for ourselves after a journey that no one can take for us or spare us.” Marcel Proust 

 

Life is a journey. Enjoy the ride
Photo Credit: Free Google Images-Life is a journey. Enjoy the ride

 

Are We There Yet?. . .

 

Those six hour car trips to Schenectady, New York to visit my Nana and Grandpa DiCerbo back in the 1950s usually started with my younger brother, Tom, asking, ten minutes into the trip,

 

“Are we there yet?”

 

To a five year old, time has little meaning and that question was repeated more than anyone else in the car cared to hear. Especially Dad who would calmly repeat,

 

“Not yet.”

 

I think of that memory as I wrap up the final edits of my first memoir. The journey has been a long one—four years—filled with potholes, detours, new discoveries and transformation.

 

The goal of publishing has always been a distant dream, probably like the goal of getting to Schenectady must have seemed to my five-year-old brother when we’d hop in the car to head east.

 

I knew I’d be happy to get there but I also knew it would be a long way to go.

 

So, I find myself at this juncture of memoir writer, soon-to-be memoir author and I look ahead with anticipation, excitement and a bit of trepidation. That’s my inner critic, Gertrude as I have decided to call her, trying to worm her way into my psyche.

 

I think I’ll put her in the backseat and leave her off at the next rest stop.

 

I have put my heart and soul into this memoir in hopes that others will feel inspired to learn from their mistakes and grow in new ways. I want to share my hope with others through my story.

 

I believe in my story. I’m connected to its purpose. I’m ready to share it.

 

It has been put through the paces of three rounds of developmental editing, two rounds of beta readers and one round of copy editing,and, as a result, multiple rewrites.

 

It’s still not where I need it to be , but it’s closer than it’s ever been.

 

My hat is off to Dale Griffith Stamos for her deep-cut edits and encouragement in shaping my story;  to Susan Weidener for her in-depth insights and suggestions on my memoir’s takeaways; to Eve Gumpel for her detailed fine-tuning in helping me to polish my story; and for my ten loyal beta readers who offered amazing insights from a reader’s point of view on how to make my story better.

 

And a special thanks to all of YOU for your cheers and support along the way. . .

 

It really does take a village to write a memoir.

 

What started as a pile of vignettes written in Linda Joy Myers’ Spiritual Memoir Teleclasses (NAMW) over a four-year period became a “sh*#$” first draft and many workshops and rewrites later morphed into a story only I can tell. Thanks for showing me the map and putting fuel in my tank, Linda Joy!

 

Literary agent Janet Reid, known for her no-nonsense approach, advises in this post:

 

“Good enough is not the standard you want to aspire to” noting she looks for writers who”sweat every word, sentence, paragraph and page.”

 

In other words, write it until it’s right!

 

So I’ve made it to this point. I’ve started the query process with small publishers.

 

I will keep you posted along the way.

 

And we did make it to Schenectady to enjoy wonderful family visits. The long trip was worth it, though uncomfortable and tedious at times.

 

Pretty much like writing a memoir.

 

 

How about you? How has your (memoir) writer’s journey been?

 

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

 

 

 

ANNOUNCEMENT: Congratulations, Dorothy Sanders! You are the lucky winner of Marion Witte’s memoir, Little Madhouse on the Prairie.

 

 This Week:

 

Tuesday, 11/5/13: I’m over at Cate Russell Cole’s CommuniCATE  blog with a post on “Releasing the Creative Genius Within.” Hope you’ll stop by there , too!

 

Thursday, 11/7/13: “The Face of Abuse: Shall I Stay or Shall I Go? by Memoir Author Wanda S. Maxey

 

 

 

The Memoir Network’s Blog Carnival: What Memoir Writers Have in Common with Sculptors

Posted by Kathleen Pooler/@kathypooler

Author’s Note: I am honored to be presenting this previous post as part of  Denis Ledoux’s The Memoir Network’s Blog Carnival in preparation for “November is Lifewriting  Month” (NILM):

 

“Every block of stone has a statue inside it and it is the task of the sculptor to discover it.” Michelangelo

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Photo Credit: Rock uploaded from istockphoto

As I look at my pile of stories waiting to be shaped into a memoir, I find myself pondering the task.

 

I’ve come to the conclusion that memoir writers are really like sculptors.

*  We start with an amorphous pile of vignettes like a sculptor starts with a slab of marble.

*   We spend endless hours looking at the pile before us and envisioning what its final shape will be.

*   We study our craft ahead of time so we know where to start, what tools to use and how to keep going.

*    We keep digging and carving into our pile until it begins to take shape.

 

A sculptor starts with a slab of marble and a vision. We start with a collection of stories, generated by various methods. Here are a few I have learned and used:

1.  Identifying turning points (Linda Joy Myers) listing key life events along a timeline.

2 Mind mapping – a hand-sketched or software-generated diagram of ideas and events.

3.” Place I’ve Lived” exercise (Jerry Waxler) – compilation of “scene pops” from describing all the homes you have lived in.

4.  “The Tree of  Me” Exercise (Sharon Lippincott) a drawing of concentric circles rippling from the core of you, resembling the rings of a tree. Each ring represents a significant date and events. From this visual, threads and patterns can be  identified.  As you can see from mine, it can get convoluted and cluttered:

My "Tree of Me" drawing
My “Tree of Me” drawing

My “Tree of Me” drawing

5.   Patchwork Quilt- think of your story as a patchwork quilt with each square representing a scene in the story. You start out by collecting the squares until you are ready to sew them into a pattern.

There is debate in writing circles about approaches to story structure called Planner or Pantser. 

Do you work from an outline (planner) or do you “fly by the seat of your pants” (pantser)?

For the purposes of defining story structure, I am a planner.

When I  reached the point of readiness to pull my stories together into a first draft, I had a general sense of my story, I wanted to leave myself open to new discoveries as I sifted, sorted, rearranged the pieces and envisioned where my story would take me. I’d heard that one shouldn’t even worry about the beginning or end until the rewrite, the next step after the first draft.

Dave Hood, Author of Find Your Creative Muse blog describes narrative structure in creative nonfiction  as “the sequence of events and the way in which a writer tells the story,” citing a variety of  frameworks that can be used.

Linda Joy Myers points out that “a memoir is a story, created and constructed with skill and focus” and requires a “story structure and narrative arc that includes three acts of dramatic structure.” She goes on to reinforce the importance of identifying “your main meaning of your story, what the book is about in one sentence (pitch) and what will the reader gain from reading your story.” Show the transformation.

 Rachelle Gardner brings up the importance of writing “real-world stories with a plot, scenes with action and dialogue rather than chronicling a series of devastating emotional events. Make sure your book has a protagonist with a choice to face (a conflict), obstacles to overcome, a desired outcome and consequences (the stakes) if the goal is not reached.”

Memoirist Meghan Ward emphasizes the importance of having a strong story arc early on as you write.

Like a sculptor needs carving tools to shape a creation, I needed a plan to fit my story into, keeping the above goals in mind about story and theme:

Annie Lamott spread her papers in a trail on the floor and rearranged them until they made sense to her as described in her writing instruction bookBird by Bird.

Stephen King described his office space as covered in post-it notes with ideas and phrases in his memoir, On Writing.

David Price advises that “you won’t see what the story is actually about until you’re at the end” in his book, The Pixar Touch and cites the following framework for storytelling:

“Once upon a time there was…Every day… One day…Because of that…Because of that…Until finally…”

Joseph Campbell believes we are all on a mythic journey, a “Hero’s Journey.” His framework recognizes a triggering event that propels the hero into action through” the dark night of the soul” where many obstacles must be overcome until resolution /transformation is achieved.  Enjoy this YouTube video.

Author and Writing Coach Mary Carroll Moore uses the W Storyboard Structure which provides the framework for  plotting out the story in the shape of a W, using three acts, starting with the triggering event going to the first turning point, building to a climax, second turning point then moving forward toward resolution/realization/transformation. She reviews it in more detail here.

Storyboarding is the method I had chosen to start sculpting my story. I began by writing vignette summaries on colored post-it notes and placing them on a trifold poster board for Acts One, Two and Three, incorporating key points from Mary Carroll’s W Storyboard Structure and Joseph Campbell’s Hero’s Journey framework.

Mapping out my story on a storyboard using" W Story Structure" by Mary Carroll Moore
Mapping out my story on a storyboard using” W Story Structure” by Mary Carroll Moore

 

“In every block of marble I see a statue as plain as though it stood before me, shaped and perfect in attitude and action. I have only to hew away the rough walls that imprison the lovely apparition to reveal it to other eyes as mine sees it.”  Michelangelo

 

 

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Photo Credit: “Michelangelo’s Pieta” by Allie Caulfield uploaded from Flickr Creative Commons

Like the master sculptor, Michelangelo, we all need tools to “hew away the rough walls” that would imprison the “lovely apparition” of the story we need to tell.

 

How about you? Have you envisioned your masterpiece?

 

What methods have you used to discover your story? What methods appeal to you?

 

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

 

 

Announcement: Congratulations, Louise Mathewson! Your name was selected in a random drawing of commenters to receive Shirley Showalter’s memoir, Blush.

 

This Week:

Wednesday, October 9: ” How I Found My Memoir Searching for My Roots”, a guest post by Paige Strickland.

Friday, October 11: “Memoir Writing Tips by Denis Ledoux: Describing Characters in a Memoir Can be Easy Enough.”

 

 

 

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.

 

 

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.