Showing posts with label writing groups. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writing groups. Show all posts

Saturday, June 9, 2012

The Writers’ Salon: When It’s All About the Writing

A couple of months ago, I entered a Red Room (redroom.com) writing contest and won free admission to the USC Writers Conference. Since this was the first annual writers conference for the university, I correctly assumed that it would be small (it was) and that most of the attendees would be USC students (they were). Even so, it was nice to spend some time at a conference as a participant rather than a speaker, and I enjoyed meeting the attendees and hearing the presentations, especially the keynote by Red Room founder and CEO, Ivory Madison.

Madison’s talk focused on the amount of time writers spend on peripheral writing activities versus the time they spend actually writing. As Madison pointed out, writers spend a lot of time on activities associated with writing that don’t involve creating any words. For example, she explained that talking about writing is not writing, reading about writing is not writing, blogging or perusing social media about writing is not writing, and yes, attending writers’ conferences is not writing. The only activity that can be considered writing, she said, is sitting down and actually putting words on the page.

One of the activities writers spend a great deal of time on is meeting in groups to critique each other's writing. Meeting in critique groups, Madison pointed out, can be useful for helping to revise a finished work, but it’s still time spent not writing. Although writers need feedback on their work, Madison recommends that they wait to do that until after the first draft of a work is completed.

Madison does acknowledge that writers are social animals, and that group energy and camaraderie are important to writers in helping to provide inspiration, keep each other motivated, and lend a shoulder to cry on during times when the writing gets tough. Although she doesn’t recommend critique groups during a work’s creation, she advocated belonging to what she calls writers’ salons. These are groups of writers who get together for a specified amount of time to do a limited amount of socializing, but whose main focus is to write (she runs a number of these for writers in the Bay Area).

I have personally been a member of some writers groups and found them invaluable when I was writing my first novel, Coyote Heart. Although the meetings did take up some time (my group usually met once a week for about 4 hours), I found the feedback and the interaction extremely helpful to honing my work. But Madison’s point about activities like critique groups taking time away from writing struck home with me. Though the feedback in these groups was useful, why did I have to get it as I went along? Couldn’t I finish a book and then work with a critique group, as Madison suggested?

While mulling this information over at the conference, I discovered that a number of the students there were also big fans of writers’ salons. One woman said that she was in a group that met weekly and found it productive and stimulating. Another said that her salon met online via Skype “We all just sit there and type,” she said. “All you hear are keys clicking while everyone gets the work done.” All of the attendees who are salon members agreed that they were the best way to get work done and still have a social connection with other writers. And all of them said that they were willing to wait until their books/works are completed before having anyone edit or critique them.

Since I had recently begun work on a new novel, I decided to try the writers’ salon concept once I returned home from the conference. There are a couple of organizations that run salons here in San Diego (San Diego Writer’s Ink, for example, runs weekly open writing sessions that cost $5 each to attend). But I decided to start my own unpaid group; I ran ads on Craigslist and in the newsletter of a friend who runs writing workshops and, within a week, was able to form a group of five members that has been meeting for two hours once a week.

What have I learned since starting a writers’ salon? First, it’s a lot easier to set up than a regular critique group. Most of the critique groups to which I’ve belonged required that the group members wrote in a similar genre (for example, all were novelists or short story writers). They also required that everyone wrote at a somewhat decent level, had the same level of comfort and experience with giving critique, and were committed to generating work every week for the group to review. Finding a group that meets all of these criteria can be a daunting task, and when a member or two drops out, groups often fold.

None of that is necessary in a writing salon. The salon concept requires that everyone be there to write, but what each person writes is up to him or her. So, in our salon, we have novelists, short story writers, poets, and song writers. Our group liked the idea of starting out with a ten-minute writing exercise, but after that and a little bit of chit-chat, we get down to work and write for a solid hour and a half (we usually set a timer). After that, the group is free to discuss the writing, share ideas, questions, and concerns, and then disband until the next meeting.

At first, I was a little leery of the notion of writing with a bunch of other people sitting around the table, but I’ve found the group sessions to be amazingly energizing and productive. And the best part of being in a writers’ salon is that there is little-to-no drama. Since we aren’t there to critique each other’s work, there is none of the hurt feelings or resentment that often comes with honest judgment of what we’re each producing. If any of us wants his/her work critiqued, we can easily arrange that as a side option with our fellow group members or with beta readers and/or professional editors.

So, I’m glad I entered that Red Room contest and especially glad to hear what Ivory Madison had to say. If I hadn’t entered, I would never have met the members of my salon group, who I’ve come to treasure, or made as much progress on my new novel, which is moving along nicely.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

New Trend: Book Promotion Groups


Note: Following is a guest post written by U.S. Olympic sailor and author, Carol Newman Cronin. Carol's first novel,a YA historical called Oliver's Surprise: A Boy, A Schooner, and the Great Hurricane of 1938, was published by GemmaMedia, with a sequel coming soon. When Carol mentioned that she belongs to a book promotion group, I asked if she'd tell us a little about it works. You can find out more about Carol at www.livewirepress.com. -P.M.

The Literary Guerillas: Authors Tackle Promotion, Together

Last fall I got a long-awaited email from writer Roberta Gately: “I sold my book!” Her novel, Lipstick in Afghanistan, (which I’d edited, early on) will be published in October 2010.

We exchanged squeals of glee, and then she asked if she should hire her own publicist.

“Absolutely,” I replied. In this brave new world of publishing, authors are expected to help with marketing—not just retreat to their book-lined study. I specifically recommended Paula Margulies, www.paulamargulies.com, who’d done a great job scheduling signings and drumming up press for the second edition of Oliver’s Surprise.

But I couldn’t answer the rest of Roberta’s questions. And she couldn’t answer mine—questions too vague for an agent, too basic for a publicist, too business-oriented for a writer’s group. Finally, one of us dreamed out loud: Wouldn’t it be great to bounce ideas around with other authors struggling to make their books stand out?

A few days later, Roberta invited me to join her for coffee with Randy Susan Meyers, another debut author. I made the hour and a half drive to Boston and we met at a coffee shop near Randy’s house, planning to chat for an hour or so. All of us had braced for disappointment, like a three-way blind date.

There must’ve been something in the air that day (or an extra shot in our lattes). Two and a half hours later, Roberta looked at her watch and jumped up… she was late for an afternoon meeting, and we hadn’t yet solved all the problems of the publishing world! We agreed to meet again, as soon as possible.

That was the spark; within weeks Randy had fanned it into a blazing group of nine authors I’ve since nicknamed the Literary Guerillas. Three have been recently published, four will be published later in 2010, and two are agented and soon to be sold to a publisher. All of us have already “succeeded” by typical writer’s group standards; the focus of our meetings is book promotion.

We haven’t set too many rules, but the next author to “come out” has priority. In January we met five days before Randy’s very successful launch party for The Murderer’s Daughters. We critiqued the chapter she planned to read aloud, since that was her biggest concern. And we discussed which of several outfits she should wear. (I swear, our “token male” started it.) She later told us it was a great comfort to her at a very stressful time.

In March, Holly Lecraw takes center stage; her book The Swimming Pool, is due out April 6. Holly claims she’s much less prepared than Randy, but she’s already received some great reviews. I’m sure her coming out party will also be a success.

And with additional publishing debuts in May and October (and my sequel coming out in July), the LG’s will have plenty of things to talk about this year.

Best of all, when any one of us has a question, we know right where to go.

Are you involved in a writers’ group focused on publicity/promotion? If so, how is it structured?

Monday, September 1, 2008

The Things We Cling To

The other day, my daughter ran into my home office and exclaimed, “Mom, there’s a bird trying to get into our patio room!” Sure enough, she was right – a small yellow parakeet was bashing itself against the windows trying to get into our attached screen porch, where we house our three rabbits and a cage of finches. Fearing that the parakeet would injure itself with repeated attempts to get inside, we opened one of the window screens and let it in. It immediately settled itself on top of our finch cage and wouldn’t budge. In fact, it spent the first night in our house clinging to the side bars of the cage, its tiny head tucked under its wing.

My daughter named the parakeet Kiwi, for its lemon-yellow and green feathers. We’re assuming it’s a female, since her ceres (the flap of skin covering the larger edge of the beak) is brown rather than the blue color associated with males. Kiwi’s protective of our finches, which are much smaller birds than she, and likes to distract us by flying around the room when we feed them and clean their cage. We bought her a cage of her own and, since parakeets need to exercise their wings every day, we left the doors open so she can fly in and out. She goes inside to eat and drink but, as soon as she’s done, she’s back at her post on the finch cage, keeping watch.

It struck me while observing her these past few days that even though she was free in the wild, Kiwi chose to fly into our house and spend the majority of her time with her feet gripped to the bars of a cage. Her determination to latch on to the very thing that restricts her reminds me of how often writers cling to what’s familiar, even if it limits us. Our fear of the unknown oftentimes leads us to eschew change. We stick to a familiar genre, for example, when we have ideas for characters and stories that might force us to explore new styles and techniques. Some of us remain with the same agent, publisher, or writing group, even when we know that new representation or a fresh critique environment might do us good.

For many of us, sticking to what we know is probably not a bad thing. The familiar provides us with a sense of history and experience; there’s a comfort and certainty in operating within those boundaries. They allow us a safe place in which we can grow and explore.

I’m also struck by the strength of Kiwi's drive to protect and be close to our birds. Her need to congregate seems to outweigh her need for freedom. Like Kiwi, many of us seek out fellow writers for companionship, feedback, and the feeling of belonging. And even when a writing group dynamic is limiting, many of us will forego leaving for the simple reason that we deeply desire to be with others like ourselves.

I admire this little parakeet for her willingness to join a strange household in order to be near other birds. Her instinct to protect and flock is apparently much stronger than her desire for freedom. She’s welcome to stay as long as she likes, and we’ll honor her choice by keeping her safe and fed. Similarly, we authors should nurture and support our fellow writers, who often prefer to operate within the certainty of what they know and congregate rather than fly solo. When they’re ready to soar on their own, Kiwi and our writer friends will let us know.