POINT OF VIEW
Newsletter for YA Readers & Writers
August 2010
In This Issue
YA Novel Review
Writing Exercise
Educator Project
News
Message

In a writing workshop I once took, the literary novelist Ethan Canin told us that reading is "about connecting with a sensibility."  This resonated with me as a writer because I know that when something I read compels me, it's because I feel like I'm connecting to a certain world view in a piece of writing, a specific take on a timeless theme, a fresh, original voice.  A teacher I had in college used to like to say "there are no new plots, just new characters" - and I'd like to take that one step further.  New sensibilities.  Lucky for all of us writers - each of our sensibilities is truly individual.  No one else in the wide world sees the way we see - through our unique experience, through our distinctive eyes.
 
And that's the heart of point of view. 
 
Not just who's telling the story or how it's being told but the entire world view that an author translates through a piece of writing to a reader. 
 
Different readers connect to different point of views, to different sensibilities. It's why I can read something and think "Wow, this engages me. I'm hooked."  And the guy sitting next to me in the café can tell me he couldn't get through it.  It's two sensibilities connecting - or not. 
 
So that's why I think Point of View is essential as a writer and a reader.
 
You Remind Me of You
by Eireann Corrigan

Corrigan wrote this YA memoir about her own struggle with an eating disorder and her boyfriend's attempted suicide.  Dark, yes.  But so beautiful and raw and honest.  This has been one of my favorite YA books of all time because Corrigan's voice is dynamic and immediate and she's just such a great writer.  These poems have some mature content in them, so beware, but each one is like a glowing jewel, each with cut edges and gleaming form.  I have given this book to many of my struggling students and they have all loved it, felt moved by it, and in many cases, felt like they had a voice to their own pain.
Writing Exercise

You Remind Me of You.

Love, love, love that title. 

What does this title bring out of you?  What does it mean to be reminded?  What reminds you of - you?  There are so many directions to take this writing exercise but mostly focus on this idea of You Remind Me of You.

Outside Reading School Project

Choose a difficult time from your life, a time you were wrestling with an important decision or a loss or a frustration and write a series of poems (3-4) where you zero in on specific, exact memories of this difficult time.  Put the reader in those moments the way that Corrigan does in You Remind Me of You.

Songs for a Teenage Nomad
by Kim Culbertson

Sourcebooks Fire (September 1, 2010)
 
Upcoming Events
August 6th - Guest Author  at The Friendship Club for their annual Literary Dinner, Grass Valley, CA
September 1st - Song and Memory Writing Workshop at The Center for the Arts, Grass Valley, CA
To all my readers and writers
I look forward to sharing more with you next month. I welcome your thoughts and insights.
 
Contact Info
KimCulbertson.com
kim@kimculbertson.com