Showing posts with label Carpe Annum Interviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carpe Annum Interviews. Show all posts

Friday, December 13, 2013

Be Brave and Experiment On

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 Bonnie's year end round up was a terrific way to draw our 2013 Carpe Annum to a close. So much wisdom and brain power in the same writing space! If you’re like me, one piece of advice stood out and made you say Oh, yes! Of course! Why hadn’t I thought of it and/or why had I forgotten it?  

While all of our interviews shared amazing insights, this statement by Julie Cantrell caused me to palm-smack myself in the forehead: 
 I’m begging you… write as if no one will ever read it. That’s the only way you’ll find your true, original voice and feel free enough to reach the level of honesty readers really crave.”  
This is a powerful statement with many possible implications. I’ve been here before, and I’ll bet you have, too. 

How would I know whether or not I write in my true, original voice? 

If I don’t have it, how can I be sure when I find it?

How free do I want to be? Am I willing to go to that level of honesty?

What if no one likes the one and only original me?

Some of these are legitimate concerns and some are just plain whining with old-fashioned avoidance mixed in.  Ahem.
 
We all want to be the best writers we can be, so we gird our loins and wade into the fray. To start the process, we could read aloud a passage from one of our manuscripts, shutting out the voices criticizing our words and refusing to wrestle with the real or imagined expectations of friends and family. This is not easily done.  We could write this one short passage over several times, allowing ourselves to be more fearless with each attempt. After all, we've promised ourselves that no one will ever read it. We can afford to write with abandon in private.  Repeat after me: "I have nothing to lose and everything to gain."

If we find our true, original voices, will we have the courage to use them? We writers are sensitive creatures. Will we expose ourselves to criticism if our true voices aren’t what others expect?  Or will we find that readers click with our honesty and devour our stories?  

Think of the most honest, original voice you’ve enjoyed reading. Was it safe? Was it like all the others? I’ll bet it kept you engaged and made you crave the next book.  Wouldn’t it be great if readers said that about our stories? The possibility makes it worth taking chances on ourselves.

Do you have the courage to find your true, original voice? We’d love to hear about your progress. Be brave and experiment on.
 

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

The Carpe Annum Interviews Year End Round Up

We declared 2013 Carpe Annum—Seize the Year! It was our way of encouraging you as an artist/writer to find your own path, listen to your inner iconoclast, and to be set free to explore your true writer/reader/human self. We invited a handful of writers and other publishing industry folks on the blog throughout the year to talk about writing, not writing, publishing, not publishing, and everything that goes on in between.

We’re thrilled to have them all back today, visiting from all over North America. It’s a bit squishy in here (next time, we’re booking a larger space!), but no one minds. Let’s eavesdrop on the conversation:

Bonnie Grove: One more seat for Don Pape, please. Could we have Lesley and Tosca scooch together? Thanks. Mind Arthur Slade’s feet. He has enormous feet. Pizza’s here! Christa Allan, could you tip the delivery person? Everyone here? Great. Let’s get started. Are books dead?

Don Pape (Publisher): We have seen through digital a real devaluing of intellectual property. Once we would buy a project with a reasonable advance and sell it for $15 in the hopes of recouping your investment. Now that consumer is wanting that same property – nah they demand – at $2.99 or heavens, free! 

Nicci Jordan Hubert (freelance editor) I suggest that although the medium may change, the relationship between authors and readers will never change. There is no “end of books.” Books will live forever, of course, whether they’re read on paper, an iPhone screen, futuristic computer-glasses, or perhaps some kind of cool osmosis process.

Bonnie Grove: With publishing changing daily, how does great fiction happen? How does the great stuff get out there into the hands of readers?

Don Pape (Publisher): Nothing changes – a Really Great story!! Whether it is historical, contemporary – a really great story well told, amazing fully developed characters. And please, not another “in the tradition of Left Behind” or “Gresham-like” – let’s be original please!!

Chris Fabry: I can have a great publishing plan, a brand people recognize, and all the “right” industry choices made, but if I don’t have a good story, I don’t have anything.

Julie Cantrell: Characters. For me…it’s all about the characters. And I do consider the setting a character. 

Nicci Jordan Hubert: If you really want to be a successful writer, there are no short cuts. Okay, if you’re related to a celebrity, you’ll have an easier time getting published, but for the rest of you… There is only one path to becoming a good writer: Reading lots of good books. Studying the craft of writing. Practicing writing a lot. Self-editing ruthlessly. And seeking out honest feedback.

Bonnie Grove: Feedback. Okay writers, dish about feedback. There’s all kinds, the helpful feedback you can get while working on a novel (and unhelpful), and then there’s the painful feedback that comes after the book releases.

Tosca Lee:  You know, I remember my first one-star review. My heart started thudding. I felt anxious, defensive, and mortified. But my anxiety has ebbed with time. A few months ago I saw a one-star review that said Demon was "written with the deftness and wit of an inebriated three year old." And I remember thinking, "Who would give alcohol to a three year-old??"

Arthur Slade: I was more concerned about reviews at the start of my career and would take them more personally. But now, with the advent of Amazon and Goodreads, I actually get a kick out of the bad reviews. Sometimes they can be quite creative (my favourite had a line that went something like “I had to drink a Coke while I was reading Dust in order to stay awake”). The only time I am frustrated by reviews is when they say something that is truly false about the book. Oh, plus my mom always says the books are good.

Bonnie Grove: How does a writer move past bad reviews/feedback? Especially in this day of Amazon and Goodreads. Everyone is a critic.

Chris Fabry: I no longer see my stories as for some mass audience out there. Each story is for an individual reader. And each story is for me.

Julie Cantrell: “Whatever you do, don’t waste your scholarship to study writing. You’ll be lucky if you ever publish a greeting card.” –  My 12th Grade English Teacher . It took me ten years to get her voice out of my head. I didn’t write a thing for an entire decade because I was foolish enough to believe what she said as truth.

Lesley Livingston: I was an actor for years before I was a writer. I’m so very used to criticism (good and bad) and rejection (yay auditions! Bleh.) that it all pretty much just rolls off my back by now. It’s not always easy and sometimes I read a review and mutter unkind things but the truth is, if you’re going to believe the good reviews, you’ve got to believe the bad ones, too. It’s just what you said—opinions. Once the book is out there, it’s no longer just yours. And everyone who reads it has the absolute right to there opinion of it. (No matter how wrong they are!! Ha!)

Chris Bohjalian: I don’t dare read the reviews on Goodreads or Amazon or BN.com. I used to. I wrote an essay once for the Washington Post about my old addiction to reading the way anonymous people would eviscerate my work. But now, in the interest of my mental health, I give the reviews as wide a berth as I can. They can really screw up a sunny day.

Tosca Lee: I think just realizing that readers’ responses are a reflection of where they’re at. It’s not about you. It’s about what resonates—or doesn’t—with them right now. For me, I know that any time I choose to get offended, I’m the one who suffers.

Bonnie Grove: What keeps you going on rough days? None of you have thrown in the towel, and you’ve all reached wonderful success as writers. Is it going according to plan?

Christa Allan: In the beginning of my writing life, my path reflected the opening of Genesis. It was without form and full of darkness. I doubt I knew a path existed or even cared. So delirious with joy over my first contract, I didn't think beyond it. Sort of like being more prepared for the wedding than the marriage, you know?

Chris Bohjalian: I was simply hoping to write a novel after (finally) selling a short story. I amassed 250 rejection slips before I sold a single word.

Arthur Slade: Long ago, a fellow writer said it’d take about ten years to get published. She was wrong. It took me twelve. 

Ariel Lawhon: The only things that matter right now, today, are the words on the page in front of me. That’s what I can control. And I will never find joy in this profession—much less write another book—if I can’t enjoy the actual process of writing. So I have to touch the story every day. Even if it’s just a word or two. The only way to stay sane is to write.

Bonnie Grove: Share a bit about your writing process.

Chris Fabry: Writing was the path to freedom. If I could write through this devastation, if I could allow the pain I was going through to inform the story, my readers would connect with the character on an even deeper level. And I would find a measure of solace in the process.

Christa Allan: My process: Hooray! NYT Bestseller idea, write reams of brain urp on yellow legal pads, write three chapters, call my BFF and scream, "I don't have a novel, and why the hell did I ever believe I was a writer?"; go back to legal pads, write to the middle, make charts and graphs and index cards while consuming coffee, Coke Zero, chocolate, popcorn, Mike&Ikes ; write, stop and make more notes and consume any combination or all of the above foods, write...continue until "The End." I doubt that process has a name or that I'll be able to turn it into a writing book.

Bonnie Grove: Advice to writers?

Christa Allan: If I didn't pursue my dream, regret would pursue me.

Julie Cantrell: I’m begging you… write as if no one will ever read it. That’s the only way you’ll find your true, original voice and feel free enough to reach the level of honesty readers really crave.

Lesley Livingston: That’s the whole thing with carpe-ing. The act of seizing is a willful act. You pretty much just have to do it. Write. You can’t edit a blank page. You can’t revise an empty screen. The lion’s share of writing is re-writing. Get the words down. Then put them in the right order. For me, it comes down to writing every day. As much or as little as I can, but every day. If I’m away from the story for a day, it takes me twice as long to get my head back into the game.

Ariel Lawhon: Everything changed for me when I realized that if I wanted to have this job—and I did, I still DO—then I had to sit down and write a novel. I knew that if anything were to come of this dream it would spring from a finished novel and nothing else.

Arthur Slade:  Don’t expect it all to happen overnight. It’s such a cliché, but write every day and always look for ways to improve your craft. Writing is like working out for a Triathlon. I’ve never done one, but they look hard and you have to train hard. Writing is the same. It takes training. And tea breaks.


Bonnie Grove: Thanks so much, everyone for sharing your wisdom with us this Carpe Annum year. Let’s all crowd in for a group picture! Mind Arthur Slade’s enormous feet.

Monday, November 25, 2013

The Carpe Annum Interviews: Ariel Lawhon

Welcome to another instalment of the Carpe Annum Interviews. Each year, Novel Matters choose a handful of writers to interview on the blog. We're happy to bring you a familiar face to the Novel Matters blog, our friend Ariel Allison Lawhon.

Ariel Lawhon is the co-founder of the popular online book club She Reads. A novelist, blogger, and life-long reader, she lives in Nashville, Tennessee, with her husband and four young sons (aka The Wild Rumpus). Ariel believes that Story is the shortest distance to the human heart. Her next novel, THE WIFE, THE MAID, AND THE MISTRESS, will release from Doubleday in February of 2014.

NM: Ariel, welcome to the blog. Let's begin by telling us about your latest book, due out Febuary, 2014. 

AL: My newest novel is called THE WIFE, THE MAID, AND THEMISTRESS and will release from Doubleday on January 28th, 2014. It revolves around the real-life disappearance of a New York State Supreme Court judge in 1930 and is the story of three women who know what happened to him but, for different reasons, choose not to tell.
I’d never heard of Joseph Crater until I read an article about him in The New York Post nine years ago. I didn’t know that his disappearance was the biggest missing person’s case of the twentieth century or that he was a household name for almost fifty years. It was fascinating. But in all of that, what intrigued me most was his wife Stella, and her strange yearly ritual. Starting on the first anniversary of her husband’s disappearance, she would go to a bar in Greenwich Village and order two drinks. She’d raise one in salute, “Good luck, Joe, wherever you are!” Then she’d drink it and walk out of the bar, leaving the other untouched on the table. She did this every year for thirty-nine years. After reading that article Stella Crater took up permanent residence in my mind. I’d close my eyes and she’d be there, in that corner booth, a glass of whiskey in her hand, practically daring me to tell her story. So I did.

From the jacket copy:

A wickedly entertaining novel that reconstructs one of America’s most famous unsolved mysteries—Justice Joseph Crater’s disappearance in 1930—as seen through the eyes of the three women who knew him best.

Stella Crater, the judge’s wife, is the picture of propriety draped in long pearls and the latest Chanel. Ritzi, a leggy showgirl with Broadway aspirations, thinks moonlighting in the judge’s bed is the quickest way off the chorus line. Maria Simon, the dutiful maid, has Judge Crater to thank for her husband’s recent promotion to detective for the NYPD. Meanwhile, Judge Crater is equally indebted to Tammany Hall leaders and the city’s most notorious gangster, Owney “The Killer” Madden.

Then, on a sultry summer night, as rumors circulated about the judge’s involvement in wide-scale political corruption, Judge Crater stepped into a cab and disappeared without a trace. Or did he?

After thirty-nine years of necessary duplicity, Stella Crater is finally ready to reveal what she knows. Sliding into a corner booth at Club Abbey, the site of many absinthe-soaked affairs and the judge’s favorite watering hole back in the day, Stella begins to tell a tale—of greed, lust, and deceit. As the story unfolds, Stella, Ritzi, and Maria slyly break out of their prescribed roles, and it becomes clear that these three women know a lot more than they’d initially let on.

With a layered intensity and tipsy spins through subterranean jazz clubs, THE WIFE, THE MAID, AND THE MISTRESS is a gripping tale that will transport readers to a bygone era. But beneath the Art Deco skyline and the intoxicating smell of smoke and whiskey, the question of why Judge Crater disappeared lingers seductively until a twist in the very last pages.

You can read an excerpt of WIFE MAID MISTRESS here

NM: Ariel, you know a great deal about the way a writing career can ebb and flow. You've taken an unusual path and, with the upcoming release of your latest novel, a triumphant path. But it's always a rocky way, isn't it? One day you’re an Amazon 5-star, the next--not so much. Have you figured out ways to separate yourself from opinions to give your creative self for another day of writing?

AL: A timely question indeed given that I recently got my first Publisher’s Weekly review. It was—ahem—not good. However, that review was immediately followed by one from Booklist which was glowing. I mention this because these reviews did three things to my battered writer-psyche. First came a bizarre case of self-doubt. (Is my novel really “disappointing?”) Then came a celebration. (Yay! I wrote a book that is “genuinely moving and filled with pulply fun!”) Finally I stood still and wondered if the two reviews cancelled each other out. (So basically I’m at zero?)

But here’s what I learned: none of it matters. The only things that matter right now, today, are the words on the page in front of me. That’s what I can control. And I will never find joy in this profession—much less write another book—if I can’t enjoy the actual process of writing. So I have to touch the story every day. Even if it’s just a word or two. The only way to stay sane is to write.

NM: Sanity is a wonderful thing, I've been told. Tell us about bit about the choices you made as a writer along the way, and what lies ahead for you. 

AL: I would love to be a book-a-year writer. But I never will be. WIFE MAID MISTRESS sat in my brain for over five years before I got the courage to start writing. My current work in progress has been stewing for a similar amount of time. 

NM: What happens while all those stories are stewing?

AL: The good news is that I have about five viable novels waiting at any one time. And I’ve learned to stagger them, to know which comes next and which needs to cook a little longer. An earlier me tried, unsuccessfully, to write several at once. 

NM: Good news is often followed by bad news. Right?

AL: The bad news is that the writing itself is still a slow process. I write and rewrite. Piddle and rearrange. Research. Write some more. I have lots of false starts. WIFE MAID MISTRESS went through six different drafts before I really found the story.

NM: Six sounds like a lot, but I suspect it's close to the norm for many novelists. Can you walk us through what some of those drafts looked like and what got changed?

AL: I played with different narrators, tense, and timeframe. And then of course once my agent got her hands on the finished manuscript we revised two more times with a specific eye toward submitting to publishers. Those final revisions were done with a scalpel. Fine tuning pace and tension. We were trying to eliminate reasons for publishers to say no.

NM: All that revision, winnowing the book down to its most tasty bits, here's the question: did you write with an outline, or did you wing it for each draft?

AL: I am, to put it mildly, a plotting addict. And a huge fan of John Truby. I buy a new copy of his book, THE ANATOMY OF STORY, every time I start a new novel. And I work my way through methodically. I know all sorts of things on the front end. Characters and Plot and Theme and Symbolism. And I always think that I have a solid grip on the story and where it’s going. Which, for the most part, I do. But every single time I am gobsmacked by epiphany when I get into the guts of the story. For me, surprises only come after I do the hard work of unraveling the story itself.

NM: It's interesting to hear that careful planning in no way negates the role of epiphany, nor does it guarantee a perfect first draft. I've learned, though, that it helps a great deal. So, after all you've gone through as a writer (so far), if you could travel back in time, what advice would you give to yourself just starting out?

AL: Storytelling and Writing are two very different art forms and, to be a good novelist, you have to master both

NM: Excellent. How would you explain the difference to yourself?

AL: I would tell myself that Storytelling is the momentum behind a novel. It’s the skill that keeps a reader turning the page. The ability to draw someone in and keep them engaged. And Writing is the craft. It’s the mechanics. How we take the Story and translate it to the page in a unique and compelling way. For me Storytelling is all heart and enthusiasm while Writing is technical and deliberate. I would tell myself to focus on those two things and everything else will fall into place.

NM: In the midst of dividing story from writing, what's your go-to thing as a writer, that one thing you can't be without while you're crafting a novel?

AL: My Macbook. Multi-colored Sharpie pens. Coffee. THE ANATOMY OF STORY. Empty notebooks. Scrivener. Lip balm. Sorry, that’s not one thing. And I guess it proves that I’m not as low-maintenance as I’d like to believe.

NM: Oh darling, join the club. Now that you're surrounded by your writing must-haves, who is the one person--aside from the obvious agent and/or editor--you turn to for advice?

AL: I track Bonnie down on Facebook’s chat feature and poor out my woes. Seriously. If not for one marathon chat with her, WIFE MAID MISTRESS might not exist. I’d written an early draft of the novel only to realize that it was painfully, hopelessly dead. And while we were discussing the myriad reasons why that version of the story would never work I asked, “What if this story isn’t about the judge himself but about the wife he left behind?”

Her response? “Shazzam!”

I’ll never forget that. Nor will I forget the power of asking “What if?”

The indomitable Stella Crater was born that day (the fictional version at least).

NM: I remember that conversation well. Writer friendships are so important. Glad I could be a cheerleader for you, but truthfully, you had it all well in hand. Moxie galore, Ariel. And that is the focus of these interviews. Sharing moxie with the wider writing community. What advice do you have for our readers?

AL: The two hardest pieces of advice I know. First: write. There is no career without the writing. There is no book without the writing. There is no writer without the writing. Second: write the story that scares you most. The one you’ve been avoiding and that you’re certain you can’t pull off. Show up every day even though you’re terrified and write THAT book, holding nothing back.

Bonus advice: keep a box of tissues handy. You’re probably going to cry a lot. The work is hard and you’ll be riddled with self-doubt. You’ll spend a lot of time circling the story, frustrated, because it matters to you and you want to get it right. The beauty of writing the story that scares you is that it’s impossible to be half-hearted about it. 

NM: I'm tearing up a little just thinking about it! We know you practice what you preach, tell us about one of your Carpe Annum moments as a writer.

AL: There are a lot of easy answers to that question. Writing an impossible book. Leaving CBA to publish in the general market. Spending years building a sturdy fiction platform (all of those are posts for another day). But none of those things would be the truth. They were side effects of the real turning point. Everything changed for me when I realized that if I wanted to have this job—and I did, I still DO—then I had to sit down and write a novel. I knew that if anything were to come of this dream it would spring from a finished novel and nothing else.

NM: If that doesn't inspire us all to pick up pen and get writing, nothing will. Thank you, Ariel, for sharing a part of your writing journey with us. We look forward to your novel's release (and we adore the cover!), and sharing your work with friends!