Monday, March 12, 2012
Quilts: Utility or Art?
During my childhood quilts were synonymous with poverty and the need to be utilitarian. That sphere of my life was defined by the practical demands of daily life and by a constant availability of thread-bare or out-dated men’s suits. A quilt represented the end product for scraps of imported British woolens my father toted home from the clothing factory where he toiled. Quilts were the destiny of winterweight fabric remnants. These my mother collected from the floor of her dressmaking room.
My parents emigrated to Quebec province from war torn Europe in 1949. And like the quilts my mother sewed, my parents endeavored to stitch new lives from scraps of the old country they toted with them. Those, too, were thread bare and out-dated. Those scraps survived almost entirely in their
memories. I saw no beauty in quilts. To me, their provenance was based in scarcity and necessity. They were covers created from remains, sewn together to provide warmth that otherwise was not to be found. My mother fashioned our quilts in lean times when money was scarce. We fantasized about indulging in
lush, warmly colored Hudson Bay blankets. I could see no artistry in the quilts. Surely, I felt no pride.
On Saturday evenings, after my mother had cleaned the dinner dishes, she retreated to her corner sewing room, my father’s complaints fading down the hall. “We just finished dinner. Leave your work room, wait until Monday.”
“A few minutes. It’s all I need.” She countered. “If I don’t put my workroom in order, nice and neat for Monday, I’ll have a bad start.” My brother and I could hear her working nimbly. The sharp steel of her dressmaking shears slid smoothly with an economy of movement. Stacking scraps of cloth, she cut symmetrical squares, usually for fifteen minutes. On Sundays, while my father dozed, his stomach filled with potato pancakes and sour cream, my mother created our warmth in quilts—doubled sided!
At night, tucked into our quilts, she warmed us more with stories about each square.
Three Found Links
Several have been published as stand-alone pieces in journals including Lilith Magazine, Hugo House Journal, Story Circle Anthology, OurEcho.com, A Long Story Short, and others.
The short story entitled Sorrel Summer was a finalist in Hugo House "Writing About War" competition and was the winner of the Annual Family Writing Project, OurEcho.com.
Monday, March 5, 2012
Feral Mom, Feral Writer
Counterpoint to Tips for Mothers Considering Pursuing an Online Degree
by Marlene Samuels, PhD
The idea of pursuing an online Ph.D. reminds me of the days when matchbook covers sported ads for earning diplomas or licenses by mail. Likely, this is too long ago for most blog readers to remember? One of my favorites: “Earn your semi-truck driver’s license by mail and earn more money”, or how about “become a graphic artist in your spare time.”
Read the rest at PoetryMom
by Marlene Samuels, PhD
The idea of pursuing an online Ph.D. reminds me of the days when matchbook covers sported ads for earning diplomas or licenses by mail. Likely, this is too long ago for most blog readers to remember? One of my favorites: “Earn your semi-truck driver’s license by mail and earn more money”, or how about “become a graphic artist in your spare time.”
It’s not that I’m anti-technology or opposed to online learning - oh contraire! At this time I’m in the 2nd week of a 4-week “online course” for which I signed up and paid. I’m really learning an incredible amount but that noted, even though it’s only a 4-week course, I’m already way behind!
Read the rest at PoetryMom
Friday, March 2, 2012
Writing Your Life: Going Beyond Journaling
Dedicated to Women Writers
A Story Circle Network Workshop
FACILITATED BY: Marlene Samuels Ph.D. - author, editor and research sociologist,
An interactive workshop where you will…
learn how to use prompts effectively as an approach to writing your life stories or personal essays;
have an opportunity to publish your essays in Changes In Life monthly on-line newsletter for women;
have a chance to win a national membership to Story Circle Network ($45.00 value).
Two additional registrants will receive the Writing Prompts book by Susan Wittig Albert, Story Circle Network’s founder.
A Story Circle Network Workshop
April 29, 2012
2:00-5:00PM
free, registration required
501 N. Clinton Street, 5th Floor
Chicago, Illinois 60654
Inside Kinzie Park Complex, enter on W. Kinzie St.
Parking inside Kinzie Park is first-come first-serve.
FACILITATED BY: Marlene Samuels Ph.D. - author, editor and research sociologist,
An interactive workshop where you will…
learn how to use prompts effectively as an approach to writing your life stories or personal essays;
have an opportunity to publish your essays in Changes In Life monthly on-line newsletter for women;
have a chance to win a national membership to Story Circle Network ($45.00 value).
Two additional registrants will receive the Writing Prompts book by Susan Wittig Albert, Story Circle Network’s founder.
- Marlene is coauthor of The Seamstress: a Memoir of Survival, and her new book, Broken Chains, Missing links: A Memoir in Short Stories. She is Programming Chair of Story Circle Network
- Pat LaPointe - author, editor of Changes in Life Newsletter for Women, and the anthology The Woman I’ve Become. Pat is President of Story Circle Network
To Register, call Pat LaPointe 847• 520•7035
or Marlene Samuels 312• 879•1968
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Feb 29th- March 3: The AWP Convention
The Association of Writers and Writing Programs is in Sweet Home Chicago. I'll be lecturing along with many other writers.
Here are all the Details
Here are all the Details
Friday, January 13, 2012
My Interview with Teri Crane
Late afternoon, my first hour at Ghost
Ranch after an exceedingly long day; a three hour drive to the first airport, two connecting flights,
two buses from Albuquerque Airport to Ghost Ranch - first one broke down so we
stopped at a casino for some lunch and to await a “rescue” bus.
I struggled up a steep path, perspiring
with effort. Teri drove her car alongside me and stopped to offer a ride the
rest of the way. I thanked her unconvincingly saying something insane like I
needed the exercise. When I arrived at the summit, I saw Teri pull her car into
a space and haul two enormous suitcases from its back as though they were empty.
Now this, I thought, is serious
writer - a woman who’s going to move mountains during her one week retreat.
This is a real writer!
Immediately, I was intimidated by Teri
who, as it turned out, was my Ghost Ranch next door neighbor. Nice coincidence
but combined with her writing artistry, life wisdom and excellent humor, it was
a great one. First impression: Teri is reserved, contemplative, and extremely
serious. Real impression: how wrong first impressions often are!
Teri Crane shared her views about her
experiences during the week long AROHO Retreat and the insights she gained
there.
Is there one specific
moment or event at the retreat that sparked an insight or shift in how you
perceive either your work or yourself as a writer?
So many ideas, exercises, conversations
- all blended together, fortifying one another, speaking at levels known and
unknown. I listened to the wind. I
listened to the table talk. While
I was at Ghost Ranch, I realized that I also was listening to my characters. By
the time I returned home, I understood so much more about them.
Not being required to adhere to a
specific schedule left me open to understanding many things. The writing process includes enriching
periods of fertile idleness and it’s this fertile idleness that’s become part
of my writing habit. It leads to putting pen to paper or fingers to keyboard
but not feeling driven or compelled. Instead, it’s knowing I’m in process and that
gives me the freedom to write.
While I sat with other members of our
AROHO community - at meals, in small groups, during evenings listening to
readings, or late at night outside talking and sharing where we’ve come from
and where we are, I realized I was talking with writers. I realized I am a
writer talking with other writers.
It wasn’t at all like talking with non-writers who ask, “What have you
written?” That’s really synonymous with “What have you published?” It makes the
writing process defined only as the end product.
In talking with writers, questions
about process are more active, such as “What do you write?’ or “What are you
working on?” The writing is alive.
We write as we breathe.
By interacting with women at Ghost Ranch, I found my mirror.
Women writers have inspired me since I
read Silas Marner in ninth grade
English and learned that George Eliot was a woman. Writing is difficult enough,
but adding that layer - where acceptance is worked through a sieve of sexism
and still attaining success is admirable.
Even though I appreciate writers of both genders because I appreciate
great writing, I feel that women writers evoke an edge of sisterhood. We’re all
bonded in common struggles. I‘ve
continued to follow works by Toni Morrison, and Alice Walker; I relish reading
Alice Hoffman, Anne Tyler, and Annie Dillard’s focused prose. I admire the way in which Selah
Saterstrom weaves a tale with polished prose and was honored to have Selah as
the 2nd reader for my MFA thesis book.
What’s the best advice
you’ve received about writing?
The best advice I received was from my
brother while I working on my doctoral dissertation. He said, “Don’t worry about being brilliant, only about
being finished.” At the time I
thought it was about finishing in a timely manner, that I could be brilliant at
some other time. However, while a student at Goddard, I discovered the art of
revision. Now I realize it means so much more. Often I think of his advice and couple it with my current
notion: once the story is told, it’s time to polish it up.
How would you describe your
typical writing day?
Typical writing day? What’s that? My days are filled with writing, whether punctuated with
Face Book status updates, e-mails, journal writing, working on my blog, or
thinking about (and sometimes actually writing) my current project. I always feel as though I’m in the
writing process whether that means putting words together on paper or thinking
about words and ideas. I guess
that’s my typical day---less structure than fluidity but always a connectedness
to writing.
Can you describe for us
what you’re currently working on?
My current project is a book. It a
fiction story about two women in the 1800’s traveling west with their
respective families on a wagon train.
They leave their gentile Eastern lives, learning to exchange their roles
for those critical on the westward trek under challenging conditions. They
discover that even greater changes are demanded of them at their final
destination.
When I went to the AROHO retreat,
somehow I knew that my women characters would travel the Santa Fe Trail but
didn’t really know where they’d end up.
Serendipitously, while exploring one day, I discovered that the Old
Spanish Trail went through Abiqui on its way to Los Angeles. It was during that moment I knew my
women would be on it!
Bio:
Dr.
Teri Crane
is a writer, retired teacher and marriage and family
therapist. After stepping aside from classroom teaching, she
decided to pursue an MFA in Creative Writing at Goddard College where she wrote
a memoir, We Never Used the ‘F’
Word, a story about growing up in her native Southern California
and the impact of her father’s death when she was seven years old, which is
still pre-published. Currently she’s working on an historical
fiction novel about two women going west by wagon train in the 1800’s, and
moderating online classes for teachers through LA County Office of
Education. She is a certified “Journal
to the Self Workshop” instructor.
Tuesday, December 27, 2011
The Seamstress Comes out on Audiobook Today!
Wanda McCaddon Brings The Seamstress to Life December 30th get your copy today through Tantor Audiobooks
I’ve finally settled on a title for my short story collection.
BROKEN CHAINS, MISSING LINKS, Out in 2012.This is a collection of auto-biographical short stories. Several have been published as stand-alone pieces in journals including Lilith Magazine, Hugo House Journal, Story Circle Anthology, OurEcho.com, A Long Story Short, and others. The short story entitled Sorrel Summer was a finalist in Hugo House "Writing About War" competition and was the winner of the Annual Family Writing Project, OurEcho.com.
Tuesday, December 13, 2011
Sunday, December 11, 2011
Writing, Reading, Getting Published
Recently, author and novelist Dixon Rice asked fellow writers on Face Book to share their views about writing, getting published, and what makes them choose to read and/or buy one book rather than another. Dixon’s blog about the writing process, craft and getting published: http://www.wredhead.blogspot.com. I tried to address each of Dixon’s questions. He posted my responses on his blog in the form of tips over the course of several weeks. But you can read my entire “interview” here.
What I write and getting published:
Until just a few years ago, my writing was entirely academic – sociology, economics and education. One book I wrote dealt with graduate schools’ prestige rankings and their alumni career success. It’s not exactly a topic primed for the NY Times best seller list!
I’ve noticed that books based on academic research, especially dissertations about controversial topics, have a reasonably good chance of finding publishers if they stick to university presses. But a major problem with academic presses is that their print runs tend to be very limited - maybe a few thousand copies, if that.
Self-publishing is becoming a realistic option for writers who haven’t been able to secure agents. I’ve been watching industry trends and talking to fellow writers about that. It looks as though the financial success and media attention self-published books are getting really is skyrocketing. Clearly, increased access to internet based public relations and on-line self-publishing sites are a huge benefit to writers willing to pursue non-conventional paths to get their work out there.
Some up-sides: buzz is easier to obtain, more accessible, vastly less expensive or free, and fast. The bad news: the internet medium is becoming increasingly more competitive by the hour!
My first NON-academic book, The Seamstress: A Memoir of Survival, was published by a conventional press but that was a fluke and I didn't have an agent. I researched, rewrote and edited my mother's true story, a holocaust memoir,18 years after she died. Betting it published was a perfect example of following up with someone I met who knew someone who was related to someone at Penguin Berkley as well as at G.P. Putnams and Sons.
The experience underlined a key point to me: you can and should tell anyone who will listen, that you've written a book (that is, only if you’ve really finished it or are almost finished). If anyone says to you, "I know someone who’s in publishing,” or “a friend of mine has an uncle who’s a literary agent,” or who claims to have a friend whose cousin is roommates with an editor, etc., - follow up with them and promptly. I almost let my opportunity drop!
When I think about how lucky I got and that it really was because I did follow up, I also had to think about the reasons for my reluctance. In all honesty, I think I worried about coming across as overly aggressive or making a nuisance out of myself - really lame reasons. Also, I considered it could be a waste of my time, possibly with people who really weren’t able to help -another pretty lame excuse. Keep in mind the reality of the adage: You have to kiss a lot of frogs before you find one that turns into a prince or princess.
Now I look back and, after a fair amount of soul-searching I think there was that worry most writers have: what if I gave my manuscript to a “contact" and that person read and hated my work?
During that time I created a very precise "elevator speech" about my book. You have to be able to tell anyone exactly what the book is about in 2-3 sentences, i.e., before those elevator doors open up again! My husband impressed the importance of that ability on me, a lesson he'd learned the hard way in business. No one wants to listen to some long song and dance about your writing even though you’re intrigued by it. Others don’t necessarily share your enthusiasm.
Other paths to getting my work published include taking classes at professional writing conferences, carrying my business cards, collecting cards from anyone who might be a good network member or who’s had their own work published and submitting shorter essays and stories to literary journals. I find that reading advice articles written by literary agents and publishers give me additional insight.
I do work at improving my craft. That requires tremendous self discipline especially when life gets in the way. The most effective way for me is to write is to work on something every day. Going back to it a week later and reading what I wrote and editing has really helped me improve my self-editing skills.
What I read:
I read a great deal and select books for some very specific but diverse reasons; they're in my field, they're on the bestseller list, I’ve had some contact with the author, a friend raved about the book to me, everybody seems to be reading it, or the book is a classic that I totally didn’t “get” when I was in school and it was required reading. Sometimes I’ll read a book because it’s a huge intellectual challenge to me. I need that sometimes. I've started to keep a reading journal, making notes about some of my favorite books and the reasons they ranked high for me.
Finally, I've been collaborating with 3 other women writers on an interview project. This past August, I attended a writers' retreat at Ghost Ranch, NM along with 93 other women writers. Four of us decided we'd try to interview each attendee regarding the writing process, her difficulties, insights, etc. It's proving to be very enlightening. So, all up, I hope my comments and views help you out.
Read interviews with a few of the retreat writers at: http://arohospeaks-writertowriter.posterous.com/ .
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