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.
|
|
I am Grateful for...Alyson Noel
I know I normally just review one book for this newsletter, but I thought, hey, it's my newsletter so I'm going to mix it up a bit. November, for me, is a month that reminds me to be grateful - not just because of Thanksgiving, but also because of the way the leaves change into bright reds and oranges and yellows right in front of me. This change reminds me to stop and take stock of the things I'm grateful for. So I decided that this month my newsletter would be devoted to a YA author I'm grateful for: Alyson Noel. Now, yes, Alyson provided the amazing blurb for the front of my novel so I'm a little biased, but she's much more than the writer of great blurbs (obviously). I admire Alyson for many reasons, but a big one is her ability to just keep not only growing as a writer but also crafting stories and worlds that readers flock to whether her stories are set in a realistic world or a paranormal one. Alyson wrote contemporary YA novels like Faking 19, Art Geeks and Prom Queens (one of my personal favorites of hers), and Saving Zoe and then she went and wrote the fantastic Immortals Series, a paranormal wonderland. Now she's onto the Riley series. Alyson is a constant inspiration to me. She's an example of a writer who just continues to tell great stories (whether contemporary or paranormal) and it's ultimately those stories that readers love. Plus, to top it all off, she's super nice. And I'm just grateful for her.
|
|
Writing Exercise
Grateful. Who or what are you grateful for? Write it down. Explain why. Put those lovely details in there, all the sensory ones that come to mind - the smell, taste, touch, sound, sights. If you're grateful for someone, tell them. Maybe with that amazing poem you just wrote.
|
Outside Reading School Project
Choose one of Alyson Noel's many wonderful books and create a "found poem" from it centered around a theme you found to be important in the book. A found poem is where you choose specific words and phrases from the book until you've distilled the book down into a poem. Include at least 20 lines but the lines can be any length you want them to be. Title the poem with the theme you chose.
|
Instructions for a Broken Heart by Kim Culbertson
Sourcebooks Fire (May 1, 2011)
|
Holiday Gift Bag Idea
This holiday season, inspire the special people in your life to keep a song journal chronicling the soundtrack of their lives.
Bundle any combination of the following: a Writing Journal, a CD, and/or an iPod with Songs for a Teenage Nomad
|
|
|