May 2006 - A Brave Writer's Life in Brief A Brave Writer's Life in Brief
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A Brave Writer's Life in Brief

Thoughts from my home to yours

Archive for May, 2006

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New this year: The Boomerang

I’m excited to announce the addition of another monthly language arts subscription program: The Boomerang. The Boomerang is intended to fill the gap between the Arrow and the Slingshot, targeting students in 7th-9th grades.

Here’s this year’s reading list:

August: Eragon (by, Christopher Paolini)
September: To be determined
October: Cry, the Beloved Country (by, Alan Paton)
November: To be determined
December: Holes (by, Louis Sachar)
January: Walk Two Moons (by, Sharon Creech)
February: The Master Puppeteer (by, Katherine Paterson)
March: The Red Badge of Courage (by, Steven Crane)
April: Watership Down (by, Richard Adams)
May: Ella Enchanted (by, Jane Levine)

In addition to the novels, the Boomerang will include questions that help your children to think more deeply about the themes of the books. I’ll show your young teens how to write what Peter Elbow calls “Think Pieces” (which act as precursors to essays later in high school).

Subscriptions start in August. You can sign up in July!

The new literature lists for 2006-2007 for the Arrow and the Slingshot are also up on the Brave Writer website here and here.

Posted in Boomerang | Comments Off on New this year: The Boomerang

Friday Freewrite: Birthdays

What is the best birthday present you ever received? Why? Who gave it? When did you open it? What did you do with it?

Posted in Friday Freewrite, General | Comments Off on Friday Freewrite: Birthdays

Summer Reading

What are you reading this summer?

Let’s give each other some summer reading suggestions.

I tend to be a non-fiction reader and these are the books I’m reading.

Reading Lolita in Tehran (Azar Nafisi)

Night (Elie Weisel)

Dispatches from the Edge (Anderson Cooper)

Disposable People (Kevin Bales)

The Secret Message of Jesus (Brian McLaren)

I’d love some fiction recommendations, though! 🙂

Comments open (though on moderation because of spam so I will get to them today and then release them). Don’t panic if the comment doesn’t appear right away.

Posted in General | 5 Comments »

Generating Insight in Writing

Getting a new perspective starts with curiosity.

Quality writing depends on several key components such as surprise, beautiful language, sentence variety and distinct voice. Perhaps the most important ingredient in good writing, however, is insight. Insight is that intangible something that reveals a fresh perspective. Insight is the discovery of what you’ve always known for the first time.

The Power of Insight:

When we read a writer’s work and have that “Aha!” moment, we are experiencing the power of the writer’s insight. Insight is deeply rooted in experience and description (there are other features as well, but for this short blog post, let’s explore those two).

To get to a new perspective that resonates at a deep level, the writer has to start by telling the truth about his or her experience. This is a foreign experience for many people. We become so habituated to saying what is expected, to experiencing life through a set of preconceptions handed to us by family, culture, religion and national identity that the potential for truth-telling is blunted by expectation and conditioning. We are especially prone to unconsciously imposing those kinds of pressures on our kids so we have to explicitly give them permission to mess up our preconceptions as they explore topics for writing.

Brave Writers learn how to tell the truth of their new experiences.

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I remember reading in one writing check list for revision that the writer should check her piece to be sure that all of the descriptions were edifying. If the writer is forced to make all descriptions rosy so as not to reveal chinks or blemishes, then the writer will not be able to dig honestly into her experience and thus bring forth truth. The writing will suffer and there will be no insight.

The Power of Curiosity:

To access experience, it helps to divest oneself of prejudgments. Start with reading widely or observing keenly. Let yourself ask questions, ponder comparisons and open yourself to new interpretations of the old data. Let your experience of the topic, scene or person deepen before writing. Take notes and allow for contradictions. “The criminal exhibits a kind manner toward animals.”

The second important aspect of gaining insight is the ability to describe thoroughly. Brave Writer offers several tools for accessing the ability to describe deeply both concrete items and concepts/ideas. When describing, you want to pay attention to the small details. In a familiar object, it might be the way the light catches the item or the blemish that you overlook when merely glancing. In describing an idea, you’ll want to look for the way that idea illuminates another related idea or the way it exposes a myth or stereotype, or even the way it reinforces that stereotype. You might look at it through the opposing viewpoint or pretending to agree where you disagree.

As you give yourself to hidden details of thought and perspective, you allow yourself to generate new experiences. These experiences lead to questions which will inevitably lead you to a fresh perspective. It is that perspective that I like to call insight!

Insight takes time to birth, but the labor leading up to it need not be painful. You merely need to take the time to be open to new possibilities, to comparisons and hidden meanings. Let your mind percolate, examine the idea/item multiple times, take notes and ask good questions. Then apply yourself to accurate (not necessarily edifying) description. As you do, you’ll generate insight.

 

Brave Writer Online Class Writing the Short Story

Writing the Short Story: Brave Writer Online Class

Unlike our other fiction writing classes, the point of this one is to complete a story. You’ll take all that exploratory freewriting you’ve been doing and hone it until it reveals itself as a finished piece. If you have a long story or novel you’ve been developing, this is a great place to find its essence and travel a shorter narrative arc. Later, you can transfer what you’ve learned to your longer-form work.

 

Image by Chris, Flickr (cc Modified to add text.)

Tags: brave writing, Writing Advice
Posted in Brave Writer Philosophy, Tips for Teen Writers, Young Writers | 1 Comment »

Friday Freewrite: I wish, then

I wish everyone would learn to …..

Then everyone would…..

Posted in Friday Freewrite, General | Comments Off on Friday Freewrite: I wish, then

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