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Blog For Writers News and Events Top Feature

Writopia Lab Comes to Rockland County!

 

WritopiaLabLogo

We are incredibly excited to announce the first EVER series of Writopia workshops in Rockland county! Cuppa Pulp Writers’ Space will offer workshops for ages 7-18. Workshops will take place Wednesdays and Thursdays after school, and Saturday afternoons. The full schedule is below. Please visit writopialab.org to register! We are listed with the Westchester/Fairfield programs. 

About Writopia Lab

Writopia Lab was founded in New York City in April of 2007. Workshops have a maximum of seven students and are led by a published author or produced playwright who has been fully trained in the Writopia time-tested methodology. In each of the past six years, Writopia students have won more recognition for their writing than any other group of students in the nation. Recent honors include: the most regional and national medals from the Scholastic Writing Awards in the nation; the nation’s top 2012 and 2013 Scholastic Awards Scholarships for Gold Medal Portfolioists; the 2012 and 2013 NYC Teen Literary Honor from New York Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg;  and a 2013 YoungArts Scholar Award.

That’s all to simply say that Writopia takes young writers seriously. Just as serious is Writopia’s dedication to a youth-centered experience. A national community of young writers, Wriotipa Lab fosters joy, literacy, and critical thinking in children and teens from all backgrounds through creative writing. As a 501(c)3 non-profit, Writopia Lab offers sliding scale fees to families in need.

Along  with Writopia, we look forward to welcoming a new generation of writers to Cuppa Pulp!

Nanuet Workshop Schedule: 

Wednesdays, beginning January 7th
4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. (Creative Writing), Ages: 9 – 10
4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. (Creative Writing), Ages: 11 – 13
5:45 p.m. – 7:15 p.m. (Teen Portfolio), Ages: 14+

Thursdays, beginning January 8th
4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. (Creative Writing), Ages: 7 – 8
4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. (Creative Writing), Ages: 9 – 10
4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. (Creative Writing), Ages: 11 – 13

Saturdays, beginning January 10th
1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. (Creative Writing), Ages: 7 – 8
1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. (Creative Writing), Ages: 9 – 10
3:15 p.m. – 4:45 p.m. (Creative Writing), Ages: 11 – 13
3:15 p.m. – 4:45 p.m. (Creative Writing), Ages: 14+

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Author News Blog For Writers News and Events Top Feature

Triple Threat Author Panel–Witches, Murderers, and Aliens!

Saturday, October 25 4pm panel discussion on publishing, signing to follow

Right in time for Halloween, authors of crime, paranormal, and science fiction genres share their know-how in the fields of electronic and self publishing. M.A. Marino (Witch Way), C.E. Grundler (No Wake Zone, Last Exit in New Jersey), and Richard Herr (Tales from the StarBoard Café) will elucidate the pros and cons of electronic and self publishing.

2014-10-8 margruherr blog post

Panel discussion facilitated by Donna Miele, Cuppa Pulp founder, who managed editing and publication of Born Minus: From Shoeshine Boy to News Publisher, An Italian-American Journey, an autobiography of Armand Miele, publisher of the Rockland County Times.

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M. A. Marino, author of Witch Way

M.A. Marino grew up just outside of New York City, spending most of her formative years outdoors creating wild ghost hunts with neighborhood kids, setting booby-traps to capture unwitting family members, and building clubhouses on top of ten-foot walls. Marino has a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing. Marino primarily writes sci-fi/fantasy, paranormal romance, and young adult stories.

richardherr
Richard Herr, author of Invasion from Fred, Dog and Pony, and Tales from the StarBoard Cafe.

Richard Herr has three books out so far: Invasion From Fred, Dog and Pony, and Tales from the StarBoard Cafe. His books are humorous science fiction or fantasy. Fred is sci-fi and targeted to middle school young people on up to adult. Dog and Pony is urban fantasy that mostly takes place in NYC, so it’s got adult language. StarBoard is sci-fi and is a mosaic novel, a collection of short stories that have a plot running through them.

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C. E. Grundler, author of Last Exit in New Jersey and No Wake Zone

C.E. Grundler describes herself: I’m a diesel-driving double-clutching Jersey girl who spends too much time fixing boats and trucks, motoring, sailing, writing, and not behaving according to expectations. I live in northeast New Jersey with my husband, two dogs and assorted cats. Growing up aboard boats, I’ve sailed the region’s waters single-handed since childhood, and done a little of everything from boat restorations and repairs to managing a boatyard and working in commercial marine transportation. My work has been published in Boating on the HudsonOffshore Magazine and DIY Boat Owner Magazine. I divide my time between working on Annabel Lee, my 32-foot trawler, and writing. My novels, Last Exit In New Jersey
and No Wake Zone, are proof of that. I’m currently at work on the third book in the series:  Evacuation Route.

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Author News Blog For Writers News and Events Third Feature

Recent Highlights: Joanna Clapps Herman

Joanna Clapps Herman Primes the Pump at Cuppa Pulp Writers’ Space

 

Thursday night we threw open our doors for a craft talk with Joanna Clapps Herman, author of the recently released collection of short stories, No Longer and Not Yet. The sneak preview of our beautiful new space drew a crowd of new and veteran authors who gleaned insights and contributed to a lively discussion about the art and practicalities of writing.

“Where do you start? How do you find the conviction to create? What if your idea is really big? How do you protect yourself and others when you write about real experience?” Herman addressed these queries and counseled participants in strengthening their relationship to their craft.

An inspiring and vivacious speaker, Herman spoke movingly about her craft.

“You have to dig a tunnel for yourself,” Herman said. “Create a structure that you believe in, for no good reason… where you say ‘I am in this and nothing is going to stop me.’

“Go to the microcosm, the glimmer of thought, the half sentence. Don’t undervalue your tiniest idea.”

A Manhattanville College MFA professor, Herman also read from “Questa È La Vita (This Is the Life),” one of the stories in No Longer and Not Yet. Her writing, as Pam Katz says,”discovers the human connections that warm the asphalt and brick of New York, delivering benediction along with a healthy dose of humor.” Herman stressed the importance of building an artistic community and applauded Donna and Ken for founding CILK119. The sense of excitement was palpable and we can see that CILK119 is going to be fertile ground for growing great ideas and fruitful relationships.

Herman has published both fiction and nonfiction, creatively exploring the day-to-day lives of families and communities.
Check out her website at:  http://joannaclappsherman.com

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For Writers News and Events Third Feature

Cuppa Pulp Writer’s Space and Seranam Literary Arts

May 28, 2014 Cuppa Pulp owner and manager Donna Miele got her MFA this month–and then this happened…

2014-5 Anu and Donna

After a friendly writing session hosted by Nyack writer Anu Amaran, Donna and Anu talked about dreams for a Rockland literary community. Anu is a poet, and Donna is a fiction writer. Anu had built some momentum around salons and free-write gatherings, and Donna had similarly hosted a few writing events. Both writers agreed that working alone was not the best situation, and recalled good experiences with cross-genre workshops. It seemed like a perfect occasion for a poet and a fiction writer to team up.

See our Calendar or News and Events pages for information on upcoming offerings. All fees to events hosted at Cuppa Pulp go to Seranam Literary Arts to build and enhance the local writing community. 

Introducing Seranam Literary Arts

Indian-American poet & translator Anu Amaran is a graduate of the MFA in Writing program at Vermont College of Fine Arts, and founder of Seranam Literary Arts. Her poetry has appeared in Fourteen Hills, Monkeybicycle, The Bitter Oleander, decomP magazinE, Bayou Magazine, ellipsis, CutBank, Green Hills Literary Lantern, St. Ann’s Review, Diverse Voices Quarterly, The Tulane Review, The Alembic, Permafrost Magazine, and other publications. Find essays, reviews, translations, and more poems at Numéro Cinq Magazine, where she is a contributing writer. Check out her recent profile in Nyack News and Views’ Local Arts Index

She says of her hopes for Seranam, “I dream that one day we will publish a literary journal and offer workshop collaborations with veterans’/youth/seniors organizations, but all that will come in its own time! Seranam Literary Arts is a new organization dedicated to promoting literary creativity through writers’ workshops, literary & art events, readings, and salon evenings in and around the Hudson River village of Nyack, New York.”

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Blog First Feature For Writers

Writing News and Part 5 of Advice on First Drafts

Cuppa Pulp color wash logo  Writing News

October 4, 2013
First off, THANK YOU to Team Cuppa Pulp writers and sponsors for supporting the New York Writers Coalition on September 22 for the 8th annual Write-a-Thon! You raised over $1200 through Team Cuppa Pulp, and we even got a special commendation at the event as one of the top three fundraisers. Overall, the event brought in $14,000+ to help fund workshops for writers on the fringes who have something to say. Every community has these voices in their midst. How much richer might our history become, as well as our literature, if we could better preserve those voices!

The Great Link of the Week is one that’s been officially around since August. Check out Narrative4, an initiative headed up by authors Colum McCann and Luis Alberto Urrea that seeks to build empathy among young people from all over the world through story: a “United Nations of decency,” as McCann says. For 5 bucks, you get 100+ wildly different stories on the theme of “How to Be a Man,” and you help this initiative to build momentum. Or you can click over to their Blog for FREE to watch Sting (swoon) sing part of a musical he’s writing about his Newcastle shipbuilding forbears.

Last but not least, here’s some writing inspiration from Jenny Milchman, whose first novel, Cover of Snow, was published last year to critical and commercial enthusiasm after nearly twelve years of drafting and redrafting. Not only is Jenny a model of perseverance (and her work a model of craft), but we want to thank her for her enthusiasm in encouraging the Writer’s Space here at Cuppa Pulp. We look forward to Jenny having an event with us when her second novel hits the shelves in Spring 2014.

Post script, speaking of events. We will welcome romance author Elf Ahearn to Cuppa Pulp on Saturday, October 26 for a reading and signing of her new novel, A Rogue in Sheep’s Clothing. We will provide refreshments; BYOB (that’s Bring Your Own Bodice).

Writing Advice: First Drafts, Part 5

Begin Again

Donna Lee Miele

Almost from the moment you begin, you find thoughts of revision irresistible. But this can staunch your creative flow. Instead, build a plan for revision into your first draft process. It might be a long trip, so plan to enjoy the journey.

“I’m happy to do as many drafts as any story I commit to needs,” says Joanna Clapps Herman. “That could be ten or it could be a hundred… I don’t care. I’m on the road with my work, and I love being on the road.”

Joanna’s forty-year career has involved writing poetry, fiction, and nonfiction for numerous journals and presses, and teaching creative writing at every level. She is on the MFA faculty at Manhattanville College, and teaches creative writing at the City College of New York’s Center for Worker Education. She knows how to work hard and fast, when necessary.

But her recent memoir, The Anarchist Bastard, took years to write. “My husband would urge me to turn my attention to writing about my Italian family and I would look at him in confusion,” she writes in the Introduction. “But I was still so utterly of them, a part of them, that I had no words to bring to my pages about them. You can’t write about that which is so much a part of yourself that you can’t step back from it, consider it, think about it… It took the larger part of twenty years to be able to fully unloosen my word hoard against this wordlessness.”

Joanna took her time delving into her family’s sometimes painful secrets and tunneling through a wealth of social, historical, and literary research. Armed with plenty of facts and knowledge, she brought good and bad truths to light, and transfigured the day-to-day of family into a cultural portrait. Not quite like pulling story out of thin air, perhaps—more like spinning straw into gold.

But the craft process was much the same. A successful writing life had taught Joanna to enjoy every stage—even when revision requires a hundred drafts.

“I no longer have the need to drive to the end,” she says. “I love the last stage of the process… Making sure I have a sound architecture, making sure the characters’ concerns are really clear.”

For Joanna, revision begins during the first draft. While staying with the initial flow, she tracks her own inner dialogue with a new “grocery list” of questions and suggestions for herself. She keeps the list aside until she is ready to think about the second draft. “I always keep a writer’s journal—what is going on in my writing life, what is going on with a specific piece, what my struggles are, what isn’t working, just to clarify it to myself.

“I trust each stage to do its work.”

The Authors’ Extra Mojo:

For many of us, a “polished” first draft is not only impossible, but undesirable. Anne Lamott writes, “There may be something in the very last line of the very last paragraph of page six that you jut love, that is so beautiful or wild that you now know what you’re supposed to be writing about, more or less, or in what direction you might go—but there was no way to get to this without first getting through the first five and a half pages.”

Revision is “when the writing craft comes in,” says Emmy Laybourne. She plans on multiple passes dedicated to different aspects, until “everything’s sparking and moving:” overall story movement, scene progression, character consistency. But not in the first draft.

While writing his second novel, James King planned a revision process involving rewrites of entire chapters or sections, but he still set it aside completely. “The first draft gave me a chance to meet and get to know the main characters and to experiment.”

Max Ellendale is more scene-oriented. She knew she’d be “rewriting scenes over and over until they’re gut-wrenching or disturbing in a way that sticks.” But not during the first draft.

Lauren Groff’s first round of revision consists of typing up a single draft from the multiple longhand drafts she completed while nailing down the elements of her story. “It’s a very long process, but it’s shorter than if I were to be attached to the sentences… For me, writing is all about finding the way to tell a story, and making sure that the way you tell a story is absolutely right for the story you’re trying to tell.”

 ***

Come back to the story you first envisioned. Do you recognize it? Or has it transformed—or become disfigured? Do you still want it to live? Prepare to begin again.

***

Draw story from beyond the page. Exercise discipline. Engage a positive inner dialogue. Be unstoppable. And begin again.

You may check your blueprint at every stage. Or you may rely only on a grocery list, or a funny little talisman that grants you excellent insight. But do devise your own practices, because your muse doesn’t communicate in sentences. That’s your job—to conjure story.

Coming Next Time: Dreaming a Workshop, Part 1

References: 

Except where noted below, quoted material from James King (Bill Warrington’s Last Chance, New York: Viking, 2010), Emmy Laybourne (Monument 14: Sky on Fire, New York: Feiwel and Friends, 2013), Max Ellendale (Glyph, Breathless Press, 2012), and Joanna Clapps Herman (The Anarchist Bastard: Growing Up Italian in America, Albany: State University of New York Press, 2011) are from personal interviews and emails with the author, March-June, 2012.

Quoted material from Lauren Groff (Arcadia, New York: Voice, 2012) is from the author’s transcript of Ms. Groff’s seminar at the New York Writer’s Institute, State University of New York at Albany, March 27, 2012. “Lauren Groff on Writing and Arcadia”

Herman, The Anarchist Bastard, pages 3-4.

Anne LaMott, Bird by Bird, New York, Random House, 1995, page 23.

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Author News Blog First Feature For Writers News and Events

Writing News and Part 4 of Advice on First Drafts

Cuppa Pulp color wash logo  Writing News

September 5, 2013–Best writer’s inspiration this month comes from a video.  Poet Neil Hilborn offered “OCD” as a finalist in the 2013 Rustbelt Poetry Slam, delivering a punch-to-the-gut love story that is also a wrenching portrait of human psychological illness. Do that in 1000 words or less, and you have created living art.

Congratulations to local author Max Ellendale for Glyph’s appearance on Amazon’s Erotic Horror bestseller list!

Last but not least, Team Cuppa Pulp is looking for some bada** writers and generous souls to support us in the 8th Annual NY Writers Coalition Write-a-Thon, benefitting writing programs for the underprivileged. You can read Donna’s plea here. Join us by registering or donating at our FirstGiving page for the Writers Coalition. Writers reach out to sponsors and show up to write from 10-6 on September 21! If we have enough team members, we will have two groups, one at Cuppa Pulp and one in NYC at the General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen Library,  20 West 44th St., NYC, NY. Thank you in advance for supporting the NYWC through Team Cuppa Pulp!

Writing Advice: First Drafts, Part 4

Be Unstoppable

Donna Lee Miele

Max Ellendale is no stranger to finishing difficult projects. She holds a graduate degree in mental health counseling, completed her MFA in 2013, and has written short stories since the age of 12. The second book in the Glyph series was recently published, and the third is well-underway. But she almost abandoned Glyph in the first year of her MFA program.

“At the time, most people were not clued in to the booming sci-fi/fantasy genre. I felt like an outcast. What I was writing wasn’t good enough, because it wasn’t memoir or literary fiction. It dampened my spirit. ‘What are you writing that for? That has no value.’ I butchered Glyph and changed it to attempt to meet the needs of others, breaking Kurt Vonnegut’s rule of writing fiction: ‘Write to please just one person. If you open a window and make love to the world, so to speak, your story will get pneumonia.’”

The turning point came when, against all her own expectations, Max mastered a “worthwhile” writing assignment: a literary memoir. “I struggled the entire semester because of my ‘sci-fi/fantasy handicap,’” she says. “[And] I tore a nonfiction piece from somewhere inside me. During our final reading, I made people laugh, and sad at the same time. The look on my teacher’s face, and the pat on the back she gave me when I finished, said to me, ‘You can do this, you can write.’”

With the confidence gained from this small success, Max went back to writing what she really enjoyed. She learned to listen critically to critics. A literary critique of genre fiction “is like going to a podiatrist for a dental consult,” she says, “though the flipside is also true. You might learn about metaphor and symbolism from a poet, or you might get some political insight from a blogger. Take what feels right and leave the rest.”

Max also found an audience through online networking. Industry wisdom counsels against putting your drafts on your own website or blog, if your goal is publication in a literary journal or press. Many publishers want work that has never been published before, in any format. But Max had already submitted to numerous agents without success, and felt that it was time to try communicating with readers another way.

“I posted a few tidbits on my blog that started to get some attention. My now-editor read chapters 1 and 2 and contacted me via Facebook. She urged me to submit to the small press that she works for, which publishes in my genre. I was able to find value in my work.”

The Authors’ Extra Mojo:

So does Max celebrate upon finishing a first draft? “I celebrate by moving on to the next project,” she says.

For most writers, the “next project” is revision.

James King does not celebrate either. “I get started as quickly as possible on the second draft,” he says.

Emmy Laybourne takes a time out—sort of. “When I get to the end of a first draft, I type ‘The End,’ and then I lie down on the floor and go to sleep! That’s happened twice, now. I get to take a nap, in the middle of the day.”

Stephen King recommends stepping away from a piece completely, for longer than one afternoon. “My advice to you is that you take a couple of days off—go fishing, go kayaking, do a jigsaw puzzle—and then work on something else. Something shorter, preferably… you’re not ready to go back to the old project until you’ve gotten so involved in a new one (or re-involved in your day-to-day life) that you’ve almost forgotten the unreal estate that took up three hours of every morning or afternoon for a period of three or five or seven months.”

If you’re not a strict outliner, you’ll know you’re done with a first draft when “you feel you’ve done what you set out to do, or you’ve come as close as you are capable,” says Joanna Clapps Herman. “By the time I’ve gone down my initial ‘grocery list’ and said what I have to say about each item I have a rough first draft, and I know more or less what work is ahead of me to write this piece fully.”

Joanna, who has experienced the full spectrum of the writing process many times, understands that when you finish your first draft, you are really just beginning. Now is the time to call on craft—“All the stuff that everyone works so hard to learn, and that is so well outlined in so many how-to books,” Joanna says. Your work has found its voice, but that is intermediary, at best, to a complete book. You must enflesh your story’s bones. You’re about to start all over again.

Coming Next Time: Part 5, Begin Again

References: 

Except where noted below, quoted material from James King (Bill Warrington’s Last Chance, New York: Viking, 2010), Emmy Laybourne (Monument 14: Sky on Fire, New York: Feiwel and Friends, 2013), Max Ellendale (Glyph, Breathless Press, 2012), and Joanna Clapps Herman (The Anarchist Bastard: Growing Up Italian in America, Albany: State University of New York Press, 2011) are from personal interviews and emails with the author, March-June, 2012.

Quoted material from Lauren Groff (Arcadia, New York: Voice, 2012) is from the author’s transcript of Ms. Groff’s seminar at the New York Writer’s Institute, State University of New York at Albany, March 27, 2012. “Lauren Groff on Writing and Arcadia”

Stephen King, On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft, New York, Simon & Schuster, 2010, pages 211-212.

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Author News Blog First Feature For Writers News and Events

Writing News and Part 3 of Advice on First Drafts

Cuppa Pulp color wash logo  Writing News

August 15, 2013–Check out local filmmaker Deborah Kampmeier’s crowdfunding drive for her upcoming film, SPLiT, here. It looks AMAZING.  Deborah’s past projects include Hounddog and Virgin, portrayals of women’s experience that are true jewels in the astonishingly small contemporary treasure-chest.  In other news: writing is, apparently, communication!  The age-old rumor that many writers fail to connect with readers because of simple breakdowns in language and syntax–well, author Karl Taro Greenfeld says, it’s TRUE. Check out this interview with Karl in The Review Review, in which he confirms the rumor: writing IS communication.

Writing Advice: First Drafts, Part 3

Vanquish “Writersbane:” Staying Out Of Your Own Way

Donna Lee Miele

Emmy Laybourne says that her editors’ initial rejection of Monument 14 “was very hard to hear,” but the usual banes of self-doubt and writer’s block never bogged down her process. She revised to produce the very different, very polished manuscript for her first novel, which went on to receive a Publisher’s Weekly starred review before release. To date, Monument 14 and its sequel, Monument 14: Sky on Fire, have earned her great reviews, thousands of young fans, and a hot demand for another sequel, due out in 2014.

“I’m really quite out of my own way,” she says. “I’m not critical at all as I’m writing. I just write. I let the stream pour and pour. When you’re writing a first draft, you shouldn’t sit down with that bully writing partner who looks over your shoulder going, ‘No… that’s not good. Start over. That sentence sucks. You know what, it’s not gonna happen today.’ I don’t sit down with that person! She’s not allowed. Not in a first draft.”

A highly trained improviser, comedienne, and actress, Emmy finds that her performance work gives her writing an edge. “Improvisation is just about training your mind never to judge yourself in the moment. That is what I think is crippling to writers. When you’re improvising, you cannot stay in the past for a second. Improv teaches you to stay in the present moment, to never judge yourself.”

Common writersbanes are self-doubt, writer’s block, or garden-variety procrastination, that succubus that likes to sit on your chest, blocking your focus. Emmy dispatches them all without flinching.

“I have a few tricks,” she says. “Number one is attaining a certain velocity. You have get up to speed. In a week where I’ve written for four hours Monday, four hours Tuesday, I sit down to write on Wednesday, and I literally just start to write. It’s right there. The next thing is, if I’m really in the zone, before I go to bed, I think about the next day’s writing. It works like a charm. Then, if I’m blocked, or can’t get started, I walk. It’s better if it’s the same walk every time. I’ll walk as many loops as it takes for me to see the scene in my mind. Then I’ll go back, I won’t check emails, I’ll just sit down and write what I came up with.”

Learn to talk to yourself. You engage your banes via a healthy internal dialogue, instead of one in which they easily sabotage you. When you commit to regular writing hours on consecutive writing days, your storytelling voice strengthens. Walking, or any form of meditative movement that doesn’t wear you out, keeps your focus active.

Your infant creative work is only beginning to find its voice. Your anxieties and fears, by contrast, are well-versed in sending you off-track. Acknowledge them, instead of pretending they don’t exist. Then quiet them. Your task is to nourish this new fantastical being, your story. Recognize your limits, be patient with your process, and the power of your story will eventually guide you past the blocks.

Max Ellendale encountered another common interloper while writing her first novel: too much advice.

Wanting more than anything to make a living as a novelist, Max brought Glyph, a paranormal romance, to the first year of her graduate writing program. But neither she nor her novel were prepared for the literary fire-breathers at the gate.

“At the time, most people were not clued in to the booming sci-fi/fantasy genre. I felt like an outcast. What I was writing wasn’t good enough, because it wasn’t memoir or literary fiction. It dampened my spirit. ‘What are you writing that for? That has no value.’ I butchered Glyph and changed it to attempt to meet the needs of others, breaking Kurt Vonnegut’s rule of writing fiction: ‘Write to please just one person. If you open a window and make love to the world, so to speak, your story will get pneumonia.’”

How did Max vanquish her banes? By hard, often introspective work, she improved her skills and her story, and gained new confidence. A little help from the magic of online networking did the rest.

**And for a little extra mojo**

Along with Emmy, James King recommends “Sh**ty First Drafts,” a chapter from Anne Lamott’s Bird by Bird. “The first draft is a child’s draft, where you let it all pour out and then let it romp all over the place, knowing that no one is going to see it and that you can shape it later. You just let this childlike part of you channel whatever voices and visions come through and onto the page,” Anne writes.

“Use the first draft to be as creative as possible,” James says. “This is tough to do if that little voice inside your head is constantly piping up… ‘You think anyone’s going to publish that?’”

Lauren Groff’s pet interloper during the first draft is getting into “fetishizing the individual sentences,” she says. “I write the first draft longhand, without really caring what I’m writing about, because the first draft is where the characters come alive, and they start to tell me who they are… And I don’t even look at it again… I go and do another longhand, and then possibly one more…

“If the sentences are good, they’ll stay… And if they’re not good, why not throw them out, and start over again with something else?”

To tune back into her subconscious when she’s stuck, Lauren also observes the ancient practice of… napping. “Napping is a huge part of the writing process!

“The dreamscape is really important… Sometimes [a problem] solves itself in your head, if you just close your eyes and relax.”

Day-to-day anxieties clamor for her attention, but Joanna Clapps Herman has the discipline to let them wait. “I’ve gotten past them so many times,” she says. “Now they are like annoying old relatives. Oh, you’re here again? I know how to deal with you. Sit down and have a cup of coffee, because I have some work to do! If I’m really having trouble, I force myself to sit down for just ten minutes a day. I start a log, where I literally log myself in and out. Even if I am only at work for very short periods of time, especially then, to keep myself honest. By the end of two weeks of this, something always emerges.”

Coming Next Time: Part 4, Be Unstoppable

References: 

Except where noted below, quoted material from James King (Bill Warrington’s Last Chance, New York: Viking, 2010), Emmy Laybourne (Monument 14: Sky on Fire, New York: Feiwel and Friends, 2013), Max Ellendale (Glyph, Breathless Press, 2012), and Joanna Clapps Herman (The Anarchist Bastard: Growing Up Italian in America, Albany: State University of New York Press, 2011) are from personal interviews and emails with the author, March-June, 2012.

Quoted material from Lauren Groff (Arcadia, New York: Voice, 2012) is from the author’s transcript of Ms. Groff’s seminar at the New York Writer’s Institute, State University of New York at Albany, March 27, 2012. “Lauren Groff on Writing and Arcadia”

Anne Lamott, Bird by Bird (New York: Anchor Books, 1995), 22-23.

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Blog First Feature For Writers News and Events

Writing News and Part 2 of Advice on First Drafts

Writing News

August 5, 2013–In news unrelated to writing, but all about creativity and inspiration and legendary local businesses, Maxwell’s in Hoboken closed on July 31, going out with a block party (during which no one could park their cars, as usual!).  Maxwell’s was one of the best places to see live music during the rise of alternative rock, not because of a great sound system or ambiance, but because you could go there and be yourself! Read writer Jim Testa’s tribute here… Also on July 31, women storytellers and poets gathered for another kind of block party at Maria Luisa in Nyack, New York–follow the conversation here. Thank you, Maria Luisa, and we hope that the trend will continue!  Finally, for reassurance to novelists, this wise plum from Richard Ford, from a recent New Yorker Fiction podcast episode: “To be a novelist and a perfectionist is almost to doom oneself.”  If we’re doomed anyway, at least we know we’re not dooming ourselves. No perfectionists ’round these parts, that’s for sure.

 Writing Advice: First Drafts, Part 2

 Getting Started: Wordsmithing By Any Means Necessary, with James King

There’s not much charm, and only a hint of mystery, to this part. For his first great feat, King Arthur pulled a sword out of a stone. You’ll have to stick your butt in a chair.

James King’s process has evolved over the years. He currently assesses the progress of his story as he goes along. “When I finish a chapter,” he says, “I create a very informal outline for the next chapter, describing the main characters, the goal, and the conflict within the larger, overarching goal and conflict. It seems to help with pacing.”

But he arrived at this by trying “just about everything else.” A professional business writer, James entered the book-length fiction arena armed with a keen and supple work ethic. But he saw three novels rejected, as well as “dozens of short stories and poems,” before Bill Warrington’s Last Chance won the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award. “I’ve experimented with every approach to writing imaginable,” he says. “I’ve tried working from extensive outlines, from a brief synopsis, from in-depth character studies, from plotline spreadsheets, index cards… you name it. I even tried several novel-writing software programs.”

Whatever tactic his fickle muse prefers, James’ most reliable weapon is discipline. A Yankees fan, James found in Derek Jeter’s 2009 record-breaking season inspiration for himself as a writer. “What makes [Jeter] successful is his uncompromising commitment to the game… He doesn’t practice only when he’s in the mood. He doesn’t wait for ‘inspiration’ before stepping into the batter’s box. He doesn’t take a day off during the season because, well, he’s been playing a lot of ball and has ‘earned’ a day off.”*

You can’t ignore craft. Stephen King calls it the Toolbox: vocabulary, grammar, structure. You must make craft second nature. Take advice from a mentor, do writing exercises, notice and follow the practices of favorite writers. Without the tools, you are impotent.

But without your ingenuity and industry, the tools are dead matter.

“If you’re a writer and not someone who simply wants to be known as a writer,” James advises, “you’ll keep going.”

**And for a little extra mojo**

In Naming the World, a trove of writing exercises by literary wizards, editor Bret Anthony Johnston includes no less than 17 pages of writing warm-ups, simply geared to “make it easier to get your butt in the chair, and keep it there… [D]evising strategies to capitalize on whatever time we can afford our writing is tantamount to success.”

Lauren Groff concurs. “The butt in the chair is the number-one ingredient for the recipe of a novel.”

Prepare to spend a lot of time with yourself. Find a comfortable process.

You may prefer minimal outlining, like James, or like Max Ellendale. “I plan out the plot turns and climax of the central plot along with the subplots, but I never outline,” she says. “I hate outlining. It confuses me and draws away my focus. I’m a very linear writer. I start stories from the beginning and write straight through to the end.”

Seasoned author Joanna Clapps Herman begins with setting down the full spectrum of ideas and scenes that seem vital to the piece. “I have a rough grocery list of what I am going to write about,” she says. “And I write that grocery list down. It’s not an outline, but just a list of ideas or scenes that I’d like to have in this piece. It’s simple and I can just keep coming back to it in a simple way. Oh, I’ve done some pages on that, let me try the next item and see where that goes.”

Many successful authors, like Emmy Laybourne, write to an outline. Laying out a book-length work from beginning to end, animating scenes in miniature first, may best support your creative energy, may even supercharge your powers.

Monument 14, Emmy’s first novel, almost languished in a structural mire prior to completion. Emmy had sold the idea on a proposal and 165 pages, then tried to finish the manuscript without an outline.

But her focus weakened. “The story meandered,” she says. “I had flashbacks, extra scenes. It was just very languid. And then I handed it in, and they hated it! They hated it so much! I had given them half an action-packed manuscript, half Anna Karenina.”

Emmy’s rewrite for Monument 14 was based on a succinct outline. She brewed up the sequel according to the same strict formula, finishing the first draft in seven months.

Coming Next Time: Part 3, Vanquish “Writersbane:” Staying Out Of Your Own Way

References: 

Except where noted below, quoted material from James King (Bill Warrington’s Last Chance, New York: Viking, 2010), Emmy Laybourne (Monument 14: Sky on Fire, New York: Feiwel and Friends, 2013), Max Ellendale (Glyph, Breathless Press, 2012), and Joanna Clapps Herman (The Anarchist Bastard: Growing Up Italian in America, Albany: State University of New York Press, 2011) are from personal interviews and emails with the author, March-June, 2012.

Quoted material from Lauren Groff (Arcadia, New York: Voice, 2012) is from the author’s transcript of Ms. Groff’s seminar at the New York Writer’s Institute, State University of New York at Albany, March 27, 2012. “Lauren Groff on Writing and Arcadia”

Bret Anthony Johnston, Naming the World and Other Exercises for the Creative Writer (New York: Random House, 2008).

James King, “Derek Jeter and Writing,” The Business of Writing, September 14, 2009.

James King, “Easy for Me to Say,” The Business of Writing, March 23, 2011.

Stephen King, On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft, (New York: Pocket Books, 2002)

 

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Blog First Feature For Writers

Writing News and Part 1 of Advice on First Drafts

Writing News

July 25, 2013–Just a couple of news items. If you’re a poet and have not yet heard about it, here’s a link to the Poetry Society of New York’s Poetry Festival, happening this weekend.   Second item: Terrible Minds on doin’ it wrong.  If you’ve had a frustrating writing week, maybe these insensitive words of advice will get you to lighten up.

 Writing Advice: First Drafts, Part 1

Other writers may challenge me on this–many consider revision, for instance, to be the hardest part of writing–but in my experience, the greatest obstacle to finishing a book-length writing project is nailing down a decent first draft. By “decent,” I don’t necessarily mean “polished,” but complete, in the sense of having a beginning, middle and end, and representing at least the boundaries, if not the living fullness, of the world you are trying to build.

I had the opportunity in the last year or so to connect with five published authors on the process, and will present their insight in a series of five blog posts.

Before Words: Underneath Arcadia, with Lauren Groff

You begin without writing. Your simmering, creative primordial soup sublimates into the elements of story. Your muse offers sparks, whiffs, even dazzling displays, but she rarely speaks in sentences—that’s your job. In this non-writing stage, you assemble the raw materials for alchemically transforming inspiration into story.

“I’ll carry around a detail or an idea with me for years,” says Lauren Groff, “and one day that idea will interact with something that I read, and explode into a different story.”

Arcadia, Lauren’s second novel, started where motherhood, a move to a new town, and a deluge of grim media events unsettled Lauren’s life. News of escalating war in the Middle East and the U.S. peak oil phenomenon, even the release of Cormac McCarthy’s The Road, seemed to foretell apocalypse. It made for a “dark place in my life, and it took me four years to write my way out of that place.”

Pre-writing, Lauren simply sought to escape her emotional downward spiral. “I researched happiness, and people who tried really hard to be happy,” she says. “People who go outside of the mainstream and try to create a better world.

“I visited a number of former intentional communities… I did a lot of talking, and a lot of walking around… I talked to as many people as I possibly could, without a notebook, without a recording device…

“Writing a novel is exercising the imagination, and exercising sympathy.”

Lauren’s longing for community and her real-life efforts to start over set the stage for Arcadia. Observing her own son and her own second pregnancy, she began musing about a fictional child, a depressed mother. “I wanted to write as close as possible to the heart,” she says. “I would never say that writing a novel is therapy. But there are elements of struggle in the book.”

The non-writing aspect of writing infuses your day-to-day perspective. “Things will come to you… Those moments, in your sleep, in the shower, pushing the grocery cart, those are the moments that give you what you need… When you start noticing, everything calls for your attention. When you open up that part in your body, or in your mind, where you’re asking for the world to tell you what you need for this story, it will tell you… deeply, repetitively. There will be words you’ve never seen before that will come at you… three or four times in a day.”

Your creative self is opening a new conversation with the world, forming a unique library of image, emotion, and language—the vocabulary of your story. When you have taken in enough to begin seeing interesting patterns on the wind, you take up your pen.

**And for a little extra mojo**: 

Stephen King says that story is a found thing, like a fossil. The germ for his novel Misery came during a catnap on an airplane. J.K. Rowling famously claims that Harry Potter “strolled” into her head, “fully formed.”

While you can’t idly wait for inspiration, accept that the initial work of any book-length piece takes place off the page: an irresistible image, a scribbled phrase, a spate of intense research. Many authors carry ideas in their heads, little black books, or hard drives, long before beginning to write.

Max Ellendale always keeps a little black “idea” book in her pocket. When an idea seems ready, it “gets its own notebook.”

Emmy Laybourne hardly writes at all during what she calls the “conception stage.” “I walk a lot, I think about it and let it grow. Inside myself, I start to feel another being that has its own heart, its own volition, its own little world. At some point, the book begins. The focus becomes, well, you’d better sit down and write it! Because the words will stop.”

Joanna Clapps Herman describes her new, barely-conscious ideas as “the strangest creatures. I love how inchoate they are. First there is a flitting of images, bits of language. At some point there are a few sessions of intense writing, where I begin to get very excited with what I am trying to say. A flood of language, ideas, images… I just ride that flood, try to keep up with it and not talk back to it.”

“What seems to work for me,” agrees James King, “is to, first of all, spend a lot of time thinking about the story and the characters. Then, I pretty much jump in with a first chapter to see how it ‘feels.’”

Over weeks or months, related images appear in your jottings. Word-patterns emerge. You decide to commit to the work. You finally begin your first draft.

Coming Next Time: Part 2, Wordsmithing By Any Means Necessary, with James King

References: 

Except where otherwise noted, all quoted material from James King (Bill Warrington’s Last Chance, New York: Viking, 2010), Emmy Laybourne (Monument 14: Sky on Fire, New York: Feiwel and Friends, 2013), Max Ellendale (Glyph, Breathless Press, 2012), and Joanna Clapps Herman (The Anarchist Bastard: Growing Up Italian in America, Albany: State University of New York Press, 2011) is from personal interviews and emails with the author, March-June, 2012.

Except where noted, all quoted material from Lauren Groff (Arcadia, New York: Voice, 2012) is from the author’s transcript of Ms. Groff’s seminar at the New York Writer’s Institute, State University of New York at Albany, March 27, 2012. “Lauren Groff on Writing and Arcadia”

Subtropics: The Literary Magazine from the University of Florida, “Interview with Lauren Groff,” www.english.ufl.edu/subtropics/Groff_interview.html, quoted in “Lauren Groff on Writing and Arcadia.”

Stephen King, On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft, (New York: Pocket Books, 2002)

Scholastic, “J.K. Rowling Interview”

 

 

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For Writers News and Events

Spring Events At Cuppa Pulp

Aaahhh, time to blossom!
Aaahhh, time to blossom!

Saturday March 23 Genre Writer’s Workshop
NEW DATE: July 6
with author Max Ellendale
3:00-5:00 pm Upstairs@Meadowlark

Paranormal romance author Max Ellendale (Glyph, Breathless Press 2012) will lead a 2-hour workshop on all aspects of beginning a plot-driven novel.  A great introduction to the discipline of writing a book-length work for fantasy, sci-fi, and other genre fiction writers. Optional individual consult.  Sign up at info@cuppapulp.com or call Meadowlark at 845-290-1572. $20 2-hour intensive, $10 optional consult. Read our interview with Max Ellendale here.

Monday March 25 Open Write-and-Read workshop
NEW DATE: Monday, April 1
7:30 pm Upstairs@Meadowlark

Led by Donna Miele. Join us to read and discuss your work. Bring a notebook, pen, and anything you have been working on. Be prepared to read 3-5 pages (up to 1000 words) aloud for compassionate comment from fellow writers. You can do this!
Sign up at info@cuppapulp.com or call Meadowlark at 845-290-1572.

Wednesday, April 3-Swamplandia!
NEW DATE: Monday, April 22
7:30 pm Upstairs@Meadowlark

Led by Julie Goldberg
Join us for a cup of tea or glass of wine and refreshments as we discuss this Pulitzer Prize nominee for 2012.
Sign up at info@cuppapulp.com or call Meadowlark at 845-290-1572.

Saturday, April 13 Meadowlark Storyteller’s Series
11:00 am Upstairs@Meadowlark

Led by Jen Choquette. An informal time to explore oral storytelling, for parents and other tale-weavers! Based on Josie Felce’s Storytelling for Life: Why Stories Matter and Ways of Telling Them.
Sign up at info@cuppapulp.com or call Meadowlark at 845-290-1572.

Thursday, April 25 Leaning on Cedars
with author Andrew Shurtleff
7:00 pm Upstairs@Meadowlark

GMWS alum Andrew Shurtleff will talk about writing his novel, Leaning on Cedars: A Story of Initiation for Our Time. Now a PhD student at Columbia University, Andrew began the book as his high school Senior Project, and completed it as an undergraduate at Clark University. Come join the discussion on the writing and publishing process! Refreshments will be served, and Leaning on Cedars will be available for purchase. We’d love to hear if you’re planning to come (everyone gets more cookies that way)… call Meadowlark at 845-290-1572 or email us at info@cuppapulp.com

Wednesday, May 8 The Secret Powers of Story Structure
with Emmy Laybourne
7:00-9:00 pm Upstairs@Meadowlark

Emmy Laybourne (author of MONUMENT 14, “Frighteningly real… riveting,” – NYT) will lead a workshop investigating classic three act story structure. Using lecture, discussion and in-class writing exercises, the class will explore the elements of story structure, learn to diagnose when structure has collapsed, and how to use plotting to strengthen any project. Anyone interested in writing, film, television, teaching, oral storytelling or any other story-based craft is encouraged to attend. This workshop will benefit beginner and professionals alike. Cost: $40. Sign up at info@cuppapulp.com or call Meadowlark at 845-290-1572.

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For Writers News and Events

Think Ink for the New Year

After an exhilarating first holiday season, we’re ready to support your new year’s writing resolutions!  Our January feature reminds you to “Think Ink” with 10% off all writer’s resources.  We also hope to keep the inspiration alive  with our new Writer’s Space incentive.

Inspiration!

Beginning this month, writers that log two hours or more in a single week at the Writer’s Space will receive 15% off any Cuppa Pulp book.  Just record your hours in the Writer’s Space blue book, and either receive your discount immediately or pick up a coupon at the counter for 15% off your purchase.  Only one coupon per month… and no double discounts.  Coupons expire 1 month after issuance. Other than those teeny restrictions, it’s almost like getting paid to write whatever you want (almost). We hope you will enjoy our appreciation for your hard work!

Look for a blog post by Cuppa Pulp proprietress Donna Miele on character development (as in fictional characters… if you are simply seeking to develop character, you may want to look elsewhere), coming soon, as well as our winter calendar.

Donna will also lead the Winter Book Club on Rules of Civility, by Amor Towles, Monday, January 28 at 7:30 pm.  Email info@cuppapulp.com or call Meadowlark at (845) 290-1572 to sign up.

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Blog For Writers

The Writing Life: Write Here, Write Now

Branching associative word chains formed during Exploding Writer’s Block!, November 8.

This Thanksgiving weekend, Cuppa Pulp has been most thankful for those who have helped to inaugurate our initiative in building and supporting a reading and writing community here in Chestnut Ridge. The image featured today is a notebook page straight out of our workshop with Emmy Laybourne, “Exploding Writer’s Block.” Earlier this fall, Julie Goldberg led our very first Book Club in discussing Erin Morgenstern’s The Night Circus. And we look forward to more free workshops in the coming months.

We also thank Ingrid Hopkins and Bern Weintraub for continuing to make the Writer’s Space possible. The Writer’s Space saw new users this fall, as local writers discovered a peaceful yet stimulating environment upstairs at Meadowlark, complete with a clear, well-lit desk, free Wifi for research, and a shelf full of free writer’s resources at arm’s reach. We hope that all writers within an easy jog will continue to enjoy the Writer’s Space.

Finally, we thank you, our local customers! Did you have a chance to come by Meadowlark/Sunbridge/Cuppa Pulp on Small Business Saturday? What a festive and warm alternative to the usual channels of holiday trade! Where else can you find beautiful, thoughtfully chosen natural toys and gifts, a rich, easily accessible selection of anthroposophical resources, and a curated selection of reading enjoyment for yourself as well as your family and friends, all under one cozy roof?

Our next event for writers will be The Gift List, a workshop on character development by Cuppa Pulp owner Donna Miele, on the evening of Thursday, December 13–see our Fall Events Calendar for details. Our next Book Club selection is Rules of Civility, by Amor Towles, winner of the NAIBA Book of the Year award in fiction. Please sign up for either (or both!) via email to info@cuppapulp.com, or on the clipboard at Meadowlark (look for it in the display to the left of the door as you enter).

Look for a News and Events post, coming soon, all about our Grand Opening party last weekend. Thanks.

Categories
For Writers News and Events

Exploding Writer’s Block! November 8, 2012

 Monument 14 author Emmy Laybourne leads this free workshop, teaching you techniques she learned as an improv performer to bust through the creative doldrums.

Emmy has had great success with her debut novel, a YA post-apocalyptic thriller warmed by down-to-earth humor. Prior to writing novels, her eclectic career included years as a Hollywood actress, playwright and lyricist, and sketch comedian.

Attend Exploding Writer’s Block! if you are considering beginning a writing project, are stuck in the middle, or are contemplating revisions of an existing project. All levels of experience welcome! Move forward in your writing and join in building the local writers’ community through Cuppa Pulp Booksellers.

Thursday, November 8, 8:00 pm
Green Meadow Waldorf School-Arts Building, Music Room
307 Hungry Hollow Road
Chestnut Ridge, New York

Map

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Blog For Writers

Welcome to Cuppa Pulp-Or, It All Began With The Writer’s Space

In the years before I began writing “seriously,” I wished for a supportive, free place to write. There are surprisingly few options, here in the outer suburbs of New York City. You get a free deal at the library, which is full of books, to boot, but you don’t necessarily get support. You may meet more writers at a coffee shop (wired ones, at that) but it isn’t free, you get terribly addicted to caffeine, and you end up talking more than writing. Or you can cross the river for writing programs in Westchester or New York City. Generally, you end up withdrawing back into your kitchen, where you inevitably get yanked at by the laundry, the yard, the errands, and the phone. And you’re not writing.

When I finally committed to an MFA program across the Hudson, I asked advisors and other writers what they thought of my yen for that free, supportive space. Everyone agreed it would be great. But how to support such a place?

A very wise-or possibly very foolish-teacher told me, “Retail.”

All that remained was for some kind, generous local store owners to appear and say, “Why, of course! We’d love for you to sell books and offer a free writer’s space in our store!”

Enter the amazing Ingrid Hopkins and Bern Weintraub, and Meadowlark Toys/Sunbridge Books, who host Cuppa Pulp Booksellers and the Writer’s Space upstairs at Meadowlark. We now boast five shelves of proudly curated new and used fiction and nonfiction, as well as a well-lit writer’s desk, complete with a shelf of writer’s resources on craft and marketing. We even offer free wifi for internet research.

We hope you will enjoy and support Cuppa Pulp Booksellers and the Writer’s Space by writing here, attending our events, shopping at the store or online, and just generally participating in an amazing outer-suburban reader’s and writer’s community!  Don’t hesitate to contact us at info@cuppapulp.com with your suggestions for what writers and readers need, but can’t always get. We want to support your literary life.

To start with, here is a short list of writer’s resources on the Internet. More in the months to come.

Thanks for visiting!

Categories
For Writers

Online Writer’s Resources

Helpful Links

Center for Fiction. In a distant future world where writers flock to the suburbs, Cuppa Pulp may aspire to be something like this. A New-York-City based Emerald City for fiction writers. Not much online interactivity, but look at what one writer’s center can do!

Duotrope. Offering a free searchable database of fiction writer’s markets, updated monthly, plus personal submission tracking if you register for an account (which is also free).

Fanstory. An online community for writers who want to get read! Upload your work and read others’ work.

Gotham Writer’s Workshop. Offering online workshops in fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and multiple sub-genres including screenwriting, memoir, sic-fi/fantasy, etc., etc., in addition to live workshops based in New York City. You can also connect to a private writing coach online, if you’re working on a more advanced project.

Togather. Still in its beta phase, we came across this online initiative at the 2012 Brooklyn Book Festival. Striving to connect authors with readers by helping us plan events with each other!

Writer Unboxed. A truly entertaining and mind-expanding blog about and for writers, offering author and industry interviews, advice on craft ranging from tips to the whole iceberg, and a portal to many fine online resources.

Articles and Blogs by Cuppa Pulp Featured Authors and Friends

7 Things I’ve Learned So Far, By Emmy Laybourne. Emmy Laybourne recently guest-blogged for Chuck Sambuchino, sharing some tips to help you focus your writing life.

The Business of Writing. James King’s funny, insightful blog on the writing life. Be sure to dig back into the archives for posts he wrote during the process of getting Bill Warrington’s Last Chance published. A great introductory education to the book world!

Lauren Groff on Arcadia. Lauren Groff recently packed a seminar for the New York Writer’s Institute at SUNY Albany. She discussed her writing process for Arcadia while pregnant and parenting a toddler, and more!

Perfect Whole. Julie Goldberg sounds off on education, religion, lifestyle, and politics with brilliance and wit. “[A] too-seldom updated, excruciatingly well-crafted blog.”

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For Writers News and Events

The Gift List: A Character Development Workshop, December 13, 2012

Upstairs@Meadowlark, Thursday December 13, 8:00pm

Christmas shoppers and fiction writers have something in common.  Figuring out what people want!

We all struggle with “those people” on our gift lists. We call them tough-to-please, but we really mean that we don’t know what they want. Fiction writers, too, struggle with not knowing, or forgetting, what our characters want.

Honing in on our characters’ most urgent desires guides us in writing stories readers will care about. Will Frodo and Sam return to the Shire one day? Will the Beast earn Beauty’s love? And that seasonal favorite story: will the kids’ (or your significant other’s, or your parent’s) dreams come true for the holidays?

Whether you want to generate a gift list or a story, join us for a relaxed session of character exercises.  Bring a notebook, writing implement, and a sense of fun!

A Crudely Drawn Character

Writers of all levels welcome. Upstairs@Meadowlark.

Sign up via email at info@cuppapulp.com, on the clipboard
by the door at Meadowlark, or call us at 845-290-1572.

Donna Miele, owner of Cuppa Pulp Booksellers and Writer’s
Space, is pursuing a Master’s of Fine Arts in fiction writing.
She has written many successful gift lists, and is at work on
her first novel.