Single Parenting: Life is messy.

Thanks to Black Girl in Maine I read an article about Instagram Moms. I blog, Tweet, and Facebook so I don’t have a lot of time to put into Instagram but after seeing the beautiful images in the article I took a quick look around my little house and laughed. Okay, I guffawed. Branding your family? Let’s get real, I thought.

Since the divorce, I have had my kids basically every other week (which has been a tremendous change and emotionally seismic shift after being an all the time Navy mom with an often detached  or deployed spouse.) When the kids are to arrive I do a thorough cleaning. Toilets get scrubbed, I make my bed, laundry is done, even if it languishes unfolded and the boys have to scavenge for underwear.

When they are not here, I try not to hold myself hostage to my good-girl proclivities. There’s no one to impress anyway and my writing is the most important thing. The mail stacks up along with the TBR (To Be Read) pile. Right now I’m starting a new writing project so my resource books and notes, journals and plotting tools litter my tiny desk. I eat in front of the TV at night and binge on House of Cards while tweeting and checking in on Facebook friends to relax .

So to all the Instagram Moms this is how one Single Writer Mom lives.

 

#GivingTuesday 2015

When it comes to #GivingTuesday I try to give what little I have to support those who have made a difference for me and for many. And after working in retail all weekend, I’m pretty sure that people have money to spend to make the global community a better place. Below are some of the organizations I hope you’ll consider this day and everyday.

We Need Diverse Books: If you imagine a world where all children can see themselves in a book, this is the organization for you. From connecting authors and illustrators of color with classrooms to inspire the next generation, to grants and awards for quality books and authors, to a clearinghouse of on topic information and discussions via social media. #wndb

Eagle’s Nest Camp: Sunrise trail rides on horseback, solo overnights in the mountains of western North Carolina, technical canoeing on Class III rapids, blackberry cobbler with fresh-picked berries, costumed theatrical events, and friends and co-workers who focus on the positive, support each other, and appreciate everyone’s  diversity. Where my Buffs at? #togetherENF Give today. www.enf.org/givenow

From their website: Eagle’s Nest Camp and Foundation located in Western North Carolina this summer camp and academic semester school provide transformative wilderness and cultural adventures. For over 85 years the Foundation has focused on fostering profound individual development, connection to the natural world and responsible action to our local and global communities. Eagle’s Nest Foundation is a non-profit educational organization whose programs are designed for young people ages 6-18.

Vermont College of Fine Arts: The seeds for many of the fabulous books written for children and Young Adults are planted at VCFA. If you are a part of the VCFA community, I urge you to contribute today. If you write for children and Young Adults and haven’t at least visited the campus during a residency for a reading, I highly recommend it!

Click here to make an online gift to VCFA today, or contact the development office if you’d like to make a pledge: development@vcfa.edu or (802) 828-8555.

Maine Women’s Lobby: Have you ever thought, “Pharmaceuticals, big oil, timber, and other big businesses have someone in the capitol lobbies of Augusta, Maine. Who’s there speaking for my equality, healthcare rights, and economic well-being?” That would be The Maine Women’s Lobby speaking up and out for the women of Maine. Right now they are working on equal pay, paid sick leave, and much more. Visit their website today and give. 

 

[Review and Author Chat] Jorge Argueta on Olita y Manyula: The Big Birthday/El gran cumpleaños

Once again, Jama Rattigan has a lovely post over at Alphabet Soup. This one features a bilingual book The Big Birthday/El gran cumpleaños, written by Jorge Argueta, illustrated by El Aleph Sánchez, published by Luna’s Press Books, 2015. Enjoy!

jama's avatarJama's Alphabet Soup

Look who’s here! 🙂

By now, most of you know I’m a big Jorge Argueta fan. I’ve previously featured four titles from his fabulous bilingual Cooking Poem Series here at Alphabet Soup: Rice Pudding/Arroz con leche (2010), Guacamole (2012), Tamalitos (2013), and most recently, Salsa (March 2015), all published by Groundwood Books.

Today, Jorge is here to talk about Olita y Manyula: The Big Birthday/El gran compleaños (Luna’s Press Books, 2015), a new bilingual picture book that represents yet another milestone in his esteemed literary career as author, poet, publisher and bookstore owner — a semi-autobiographical story that’s especially close to his heart.

Since founding Luna’s Pressabout 20 years ago, Jorge has published a number of chapbooks by San Francisco poets, but Olita y Manyula is the press’s first children’s book. This charming story features a young girl named Holly (Olita) who travels from the…

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The Revision Cave: All In

As a middle school educator I taught the writing process as a series of steps that separated “revision” from “editing.” Revision, I told my students had to do with answering the big questions that a reader had about your work. It was the writer’s chance to go deeper, be more specific, cut what didn’t work, be clear. Editing on the other hand was about the conventions: spelling, grammar, etc. (By the way if you teach writing I highly recommend Kate Messner’s, REAL REVISION)

At some point in the journey of my writing career, someone at some conference or workshop or lecture pointed out the obvious that the word revision is re-vision or “to see again in a new way.” I took on this definition as my mantra and thus, each revision has turned into a massive undertaking where I basically re-write a manuscript.

It doesn’t start that way. It usually starts with finding a better beginning. Beginnings are hard and many writers talk about a necessary writing to the end in order to fine tune a beginning again (and again). Of course, my fine tuning sets off a ripple effect throughout the entire manuscript. When faced with a section of manuscript that doesn’t work, I pinpoint the problem, I brainstorm solutions then I try it. (“Try it”–is another good piece of advice that can be an entrance to a revision blackhole.) How about a whole new character, Anna? And what if you add an epistolary element? What if, what if, what if…?

I’m pleased to say that I’ve been making steady progress in the revision cave for the last two weeks! My word count each day has hovered around 1000 as I reorder, rewrite, and rediscover the story I am trying to tell. I am going deeper, being more specific, cutting what didn’t work, being clear. Here are a few other things that I’m working on that you might notice in your work:

Where Does the Scene End:
I often end a scene where it will make a good chapter ending–one that doesn’t let the arc of that scene come to resolution, one that keeps the reader a little on their toes. This is a good thing unless, I haven’t given the reader everything they need. When I haven’t, I seem to start the next scene with a quick summation of what the reader missed. Sometimes this info is crucial to the emotional arc of the character. It should have happened “in-scene.” I am looking for these places in the work and rewriting to show the emotions instead.

Tension Makes Me Tense:
I am a pantser by nature but recent workshops with David Macinnis Gill and re-readings of Vogler’s,THE WRITER’S JOURNEY, and McKee’s, STORY have reminded me that plotting and outlining helps. I struggle to make the tension rise throughout a story and sometimes fall into and episodic (good fodder for another post) form of story telling. In this revision, I’ve listed the steps of the hero’s journey and jotted down the scenes that will happen at each of these crucial points. This organizing tool has been incredibly helpful. I’ve also written out what I see as my MC’s controlling belief (an idea I gleaned from Kathi Appelt and Franny Billingsley ) and I’ve added to that a question that describes her emotional arc. I make sure that each scene addresses in someway my MC’s belief and question (and desire but that’s also another post). This forces me to stay on track in the plotting.
Controlling belief: My mother left because she thought I was ugly and useless.
Question: Am I worthy of people’s love?

I guess these are similar but it has helped me.

Who Hates You Baby:
As students we learned the different types of conflict: man v. man, man v. self, man v. society, man v. nature, man v. machine. (Man! We’ll assume that is short for human.)
I was convinced that my book was MC v. self but part of the lack of tension in my manuscript came from the lack of a clear antagonist. I struggled with this idea, but in this revision I’ve chosen to clarify the antagonist and amp up the adversarial nature of their relationship.

I’ll be back in the revision cave come Monday but for now… out of the cave and into the mountains!

Copyright: fredlyfish4 / 123RF Stock Photo
Copyright: fredlyfish4 / 123RF Stock Photo

Poetry Friday: The Smith-Corona

I recently became the caregiver to a 1953(?) Smith-Corona typewriter which inspired the following poem. Enjoy! (Now if I could only find a new ribbon.)

There aren’t a lot of typewriters out there
not a lot of typers either.
Hard to get ribbons and parts.
A’s require pinkie force that I do not possess.
Computers have made me soft.
Still there is a satisfaction of
FORCE
and noise
each clack of hammer on roller
the absence of wires
no plug in sight
just me and the keys and the return bar.
My thoughts too quick
hammers catch on each other
stuck like a logjam of paperwork
sitting on some secretary’s desk.
She with pencils in her hair
and a pencil slim skirt
doing a hard days work.
I imagine her
young
spunky
driven
wanting more.
To be a journalist
a novelist
the boss.
Just like her
my time will come.


WNDB Mentorship Program

News from the We Need Diverse Books organization!

WNDB Mentorship Program

Are you a diverse writer or illustrator, or working on a diverse book? Award-winning diverse authors and illustrators will support and guide recipients through a yearlong mentorship, providing support and guidance throughout the creative and publication process. Applications for the 2016 mentorship program will be open from October 1-31, 2015, and recipients will be announced in December, 2015. Information on the program and the application are available at http://weneeddiversebooks.org/aboutapply/

Specific questions can be directed to wndbmentorship@gmail.com (mailto:wndbmentorship@gmail.com)

Launch Party for I’M NEW HERE, by Anne Sibley O’Brien: September 19th, Portland, Maine

It’s my great pleasure to pass on information from the author/illustrator Anne Sibley O’Brien regarding her new book, I’M NEW HERE. Anne and I worked together to expand her school and library speaking bookings. She traveled to Seattle, the Philippines, and beyond meeting with children and educators to discuss issues of diversity, privilege, and peace. Her most recent picture book is about welcoming new people everywhere. (An important thing when the news is full of refugees seeking new places to call home.) If you live in the Portland, Maine area, I hope you’ll try to attend Anne’s book launch on September 19th, 2-4, at the Portland Public Library. If not, purchase the book at your local independent book seller and find out more about the book on Anne’s website.
FROM ANNE:
I’m excited about my latest picture book, I’m New Here, about 3 immigrant children. It’s been getting some wonderful attention, including a starred review in Kirkus and a mention in the August 23 New York Times Sunday Book Review!
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The launch will celebrate National Welcoming Week – http://www.welcomingamerica.org/get-involved/national-welcoming-week-2015/
I’m New Here Launch Party
Rines Auditorium, Portland Public Library
Saturday, September 19
2:004:00 p.m.
The event is a film premiere for the book trailer/video teaching tool, starring Hall School elementary students talking about being new and being welcoming. There will be a red carpet, flashing bulbs, and photo ops, as well as snacks from Portland’s multicultural markets.
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Please stop by if you’re available!
Thanks,
Annie