Wednesday, 13 October 2010

Write who you are: Teri Terry has an identity crisis

It might seem rather incestuous - today's guest blogger Teri Terry is basing her blog on a talk I gave in Birmingham last week. As I always do, I bashed on about how it's not about writing what you know but writing who you are (not an original thought, unfortunately - I read it in Plot and Structure by James Scott Bell).I also read in Story by Robert McKee that Stanislavski used to ask his actors: Are you in love with the art in yourself or yourself in your art? Hmm. Inneresting question for anyone trying to write novels.
Candy Gourlay

Who Am I, and what does it mean for my writing?

A reasonable question to ask. I’m posing it after having a bit of a light-bulb moment on Saturday.

I was on the train coming back from Birmingham, iPod on, not thinking about anything in particular while the countryside rushed past my window. But random things were having a chat in my subconscious, as they do. I’ve always founds trains are great places for thinking.

I’d just been to the SCBWI event with Candy Gourlay and lots of lovely SCBWI friends as well. I won’t be a spoiler and tell you all about it, as this event may appear in a location near you, soon (and GO if it does – it was a fascinating and inspiring talk). But a few thoughts collided in my brain on the journey home.

They were three:

  • a rejection received the day before: along of the lines of, concept check; writing check; supporting cast, check; main character – er… – lacking something?
  • Culture and cultural clashes – being from one place, living in another – what this means (and from a personal perspective, it is one of those things you don’t really get when you are making the decision: at 20-something or even 30-something, you don’t feel the long-term implications in your guts)
  • Write what you know vs. write what you are.
I’ve had this sort of debate with myself, before. If you looked up ‘rootless’ in the dictionary, I’m sure you’d see my photo: Dad Dutch, Mum’s parents Finnish, me born in France, moving every five minutes with Dad’s air force postings throughout childhood. And I continued this pattern on my own, living all over Canada and Australia, collecting degrees and changing careers along the way, until I somehow landed in England. I’ve lived in the same house here now for six years with my partner, and I’ve never even come close to that long before. It is a bit terrifying.

When Frances Lincoln had a ‘Diverse Voices’ writing competition a few years ago, I remember looking at it, and wondering: would writing about belonging nowhere be an acceptable interpretation of the rules?

I decided not, but out of the thinking JJ was born, my 13 year old character in Meet Me at the Lost and Found whose artist dad and poet mum had her many times around the globe before she could talk.

Writing what you know: the feeling of belonging nowhere and trying to find a place for yourself, and the survival techniques you learn, like how to quickly integrate enough but not too much in new surroundings. The ‘one friend’ rule: you just need one, and you’re all right.

When it was gently rejected last week, it was pointed out that the ‘warm fuzzies’ this sort of 10-plus book needed to have were missing. The expectation that JJ was making her own family for herself when her parents dumped her with an Aunt in London were not fulfilled. The relationship with her Aunt and Grandad didn’t develop sufficiently, and JJ wasn’t likeable enough. And the criticism was fair.

On my train journey, I was thinking about the three things I mentioned above, and about rejections of the past. And I started to spot a pattern.

My secondary characters are not generally a problem: it is always the ‘I’, the main character, their development, their relationships, readers’ sympathies with them. There seemed to be a recurring theme.

A-ha! An epiphany! Something to work on, and think about.

But the why is less comfortable. When I write, I am my main character. Male, female, whatever age. JJ feeling disconnected from anywhere is writing what I know. But resolving the story to give warm fuzzies at the end isn’t what I know. I don’t get it. Because I still always feel like I don’t belong anywhere, like I need space. Like I don’t want to get too close to people in case they disappear. Beyond my ‘one friend’ – long-suffering, darling husband – I get to a certain point in relationships with people, then back away.

Ways forward for my writing?

I get it, and I’ll work on it. And I also see why I prefer writing for 12 or 14-plus. Adolescents are plagued with feeling alienated and needing to find their way. Warm fuzzies aren’t my specialty. Dystopias are just the thing…

Teri is currently writing Slated, a chilling YA Dystopian trilogy.

Last word from Candy: well this is a pet topic of mine so I can't help putting in a last word. Not mine but another quote from Robert McKee that really resonates with me - Make no mistake, no one can achieve excellence as a writer without being something of a philosopher and holding strong convictions. The trick is not to be a slave of your ideas, but to immerse yourself in life.

Heads up, anyone working on high concept who hasn't wept over a character yet.

Thursday, 9 September 2010

Is this a mobile device I see before me?

I was at a dinner attended by lots of authors when we got to chatting about Twitter and whether anyone could ever make any sense of it (as you do). "People just chat as if they are having a conversation," Nina Killham said. "And if you want to trace the thread of a conversation, everything's back to front!" Fiona Dunbar added. The result was a Twitter retelling of Romeo and Juliet by Nina ... followed by a response on Facebook from Fiona - a Twitter version of Macbeth! I've offered to put Fiona's Macbeth on my blog - as it's a bit spicy for her own kiddy targetted blog ... and what do you know ... responding to Fiona's response to Nina's Romeo and Juliet is a tweet version of Otthelo by Mrs Bung aka Kathy Evans. Anyone else fancy a bit of Tweetspeare?

Following Nina Killham’s hilarious ‘Romeo and Juliet on Twitter’ I couldn’t resist following up with a similar version of ‘The Scottish Play’. Truth be told, I did it at three in the morning; sometimes an idea grabs you like that, and you just have to go with it. As I’m a Nice Children’s Author, and unlike my books this carries a 13+ age guidance (parents take note!) I thought I’d better not put it on my own blog. But anything goes on Notes From The Slushpile...well, it does now. FD

(as every story unfolds in reverse on Twitter, so does this!)



Macduff: Ah, but I came out t’other way: C-section #getoutclause #lastlaugh

Macbeth: Major bit of aggro with Macduff, but it’s OK no man born of a woman’s u-no-what can get me #getoutclause

Macbeth: Hang on…oh shit.

Macbeth: Neighbour’s Leylandii seriously out of hand. This means war.

Twitter is over capacity.

Macduff: PS: bring branches from Birnam Wood.

Macduff: RT Malcolm: To all my followers: #ff Macbeth@Dunsinane.

Macbeth: Oh well. RT@ Randombint: OMG LadyMac topped herself

Randombint: OMG LadyMac topped herself please RT

Macbeth: Can I remind you lot my position here secure till the day Birnam Wood moves on my castle, i.e. NEVER?? #getoutclause

Macbeth: I now have 10K enemies. This is a first. Is it scotch o’clock yet?

Twitter is over capacity.

Macbeth: OK, noticed loads of you are unfollowing me. Well, f**k the lot of you.

LadyMac: This is driving me nuts! #personalhygeinefail

LadyMac: Seriously; anyone? I’ve tried Swarfega and everything.

LadyMac: Anyone know of a good heavy-duty cleaner?

3Witches: @Macbeth Cool, whatever.

Macbeth: @3Witches OK, phew! Well, just to be on the safe side I’ll have his lot bumped off.

3Witches: @Macbeth Yeah. But it’s OK, you’re safe: no man born of woman can harm you, and nothing’ll happen til Birnam Wood comes to Dunsinane Castle.

Macbeth: @3Witches He does?

3Witches: @Macbeth Beware Macduff. He hates your ass.

Macbeth: @3Witches OK, I’m shit-scared now. Tell me what to do.

LadyMac: Well, that was a massive #partyfail. Husband seriously lost marbles: stress, you know. Sorry all. Will reschedule.

BanquoInHeaven: OK, I am SO getting my own back for this #deathrevenge

Macbeth: @LadyMac Nothing.

LadyMac: @Macbeth Only what??

Macbeth: @LadyMac Er, says he’s going to. Only, um…

LadyMac: @Macbeth Darling, is Banquo coming to the party tonight? And Fleance? Spot of #guestlisthell

LadyMac: On a more positive note those dreadful sons of Duncan’s, Malcolm & the other 1, have left now so you can strip their beds.

LadyMac: @DunsinaneStaff: Can you come upstairs, north wing? Bit of a mess: more bodies, I’m afraid.

Banquo: RT ScottishIndependent: KING DUNCAN MURDERED AT DUNSINANE.

LadyMac: @Macbeth Oh ffs, get on with it.

Macbeth: Is this a dagger I see before me…?

LadyMac: @DuncanStaff: We’re well-stocked with booze, you’ll be glad to hear!

LadyMac: I like a man of action. Know what I mean, girls? A man of ACTION. #myhusbandisawimp

Macbeth: @LadyMac: Chuck, I’m not sure…

LadyMac: @Macbeth YES. IT IS.

Macbeth: @LadyMac: Is that strictly necessary?

LadyMac: @Macbeth Kitchen preps for our distinguished guest; just off to get knives sharpened, back soon. Love yoooo! xxx

LadyMac: @KingDuncan Squeeee! Can’t Wait.

KingDuncan: @Macbeth @LadyMac Coming for visit, get the haggis on.

DianaInHeaven: @LadyMac I would, darlin’, but this is an anachronism.

LadyMac: @DianaInHeaven: see to it, OK?

LadyMac: @Banquo: Oh yes it does. Knew it! Everybody: I’m gonna be queeeen! Please RT.

Banquo: @Macbeth OK, this doesn’t MEAN…

Macbeth: OMG!! OMG!!

KingDuncan: @Macbeth: Well done re: victory over Irish, Norwegians etc. I hereby pronounce you the new Thane of Cawdor!

Banquo: @Macbeth No, it’s bullshit. Well, except what they said about me begetting a line of Scottish kings #thatbitistrue

Macbeth: @Banquo Wow! I’m gonna be King. Are these bints for real?

3Witches: @Macbeth Yup. And Banquo gets the consolation prize: a Crackerjack pencil, and royal descendents.

Macbeth: @3Witches No shit! Srsly?

3Witches: @Macbeth Future Thane@Glamis! And Thane@Cawdor! And King@Scotland, even!

Macbeth: @3Witches You what?

3Witches: Our bets are on Macbeth #leadershipbattle

Fiona is the author of the Lulu Baker trilogy which has been turned into the TV series Jinx, and the Silk Sisters trilogy which features a girl with the power to change like a chameleon. The first book in her new series for 8-12s, Divine Freaks, is out early next year can follow Fiona's blog here.

Tuesday, 24 August 2010

Guest Author Teri Terry: winning stuff at conferences and shocking endings

Teri Terry is a writing buddy who has blogged for me before. She’s been to the 30th Winchester Writers’ Conference and hauled a few awards, so this time, I thought I’d interview her - be sure to read to the end of this interview so that you don't miss the truly shocking ending. Teri divides her time between writing, stalking agents and publishers, and working in a library in Bucks, and as if this isn’t enough to keep her busy, is also reading for an MA in creative writing at the University of Bedfordshire in YA fiction.
How did you find the Winchester Writers Conference?

I took a train to Winchester, got in a taxi, and said ‘take me to the conference’

….that isn’t what I meant.

I know.

Well…?

Can you be a bit more specific?

I see this is going to be one of those days. Tell us about the conference.

It was a full on intense weekend of panels, plenaries, workshops, one-to-ones, awards dinners, schmoozing, drinking, and not sleeping. But now I’ve had some time to recover and jump up and down to see what thoughts settle as a result.

Highlights?

One has got to be Terry Pratchett’s plenary address. His work, his life, the way he is getting through things now are such an inspiration. Also the way the packed to over-flowing venue was so silent you could hear a pin drop, everyone willing him to get through it, to find the right words. And he did.
I’m sure there were more highlights.

There were many: meeting up with old friends and new, all the discussions, the exchange of ideas, the one-to-ones, the…

Other sorts of highlights. Like, say, winning a few awards.

Oh, that. If you insist. Yes well I did win first prize in the Greenhouse Literary Agency prize for my 10-plus novel, Meet Me at the Lost and Found. That was adjudicated and awarded by Julia Churchill. And also a first in Writing for Children 12-plus for dystopian novel, Slated, awarded by Jude Evans of Little Tiger Press and associated Stripes. And Arthur and the Bad Lads was highly commended in the 8-11; and YA ghost story Claustrophobia was commended in the first three pages of a novel competition.

Teri (centre) with other victors at the final Winchester Conference winners photoshoot.

Wow that is quite a haul. I am truly impressed. Of course you are so talented, it is hardly a surprise.

Stop it, you’re making me blush!

If there are any agents or editors out there they should get in touch with Teri, right now.

Should we get back to the conference?

All right. Any other highlights?

I was also thrilled when friends Paula Harrison got a second for Rescue Princesses for Writing for Children aged 4 – 7, and Anne Jensen first prize in the page of prose for her Aphelion. We’re in the same writing group.

Lowlights?

OH MY it was HOT. So hot. Though heat is a great leveller: agents, editors, famous authors and wannabees all sweat, just the same.

Did you learn anything?

Robert Goddard says plotting is about meticulous planning.

Terry Pratchett doesn’t plot; he likes to see where he will end up, a sort of steered serendipity.

Terry Pratchett
Hmmm….

Anything else?

Three other thoughts settled in my mind after jumping about for a week: technology is OK, size does matter, and it’s a small world.

I see. Perhaps you could elaborate.

I went to see Carolyn Caughey (editor at Hodder) talk about finding a publisher in hard times. A good general discussion but she touched on these new-fangled electronic book gizmos. What do you call them?

Authors dread the rise of the handy, carry-anywhere digital reading device 


I’m supposed to be asking the questions, here. Do you mean e-books, like Kindle?

Yes. As a wannabee author, the thought of one day holding a book in my hands is part of what keeps me going. And by ‘book’ I mean the sort with an illustrated cover and pages in-between, and…

You mean like Tall Story, with beautifully illustrated cover and available at Amazon right now:

Don’t hijack. Anyhow the draw of holding my own book one day is so strong; I suppose I’ve viewed the potential explosion of e-books with a sense of queasy distrust. But she pointed out that those who produce the content (writers - us ) can only gain by new formats; those who produce the traditional formats (them – publishers, printers etc) need to get with it or be obsolete. I hadn’t thought of it quite that way before.

Your second point: does size matter?

Apparently. My adult crime novel Ready Steady Run – sort of like Bridget Jones with a body count – is very clever and amazingly well written, but too short to be taken seriously. Apparently 100,000 words would be just right.

And it’s a small world?

Oh yes. Sitting in the bar with a random woman who turns out to be author of a signed book on my shelf at home that I got as a raffle prize a few years ago (Dangerous Sports Euthanasia Society, by Christine Coleman). Scary story as her first book got published, then the publisher went bust, and….

NOOOO…. (stuffs fingers in ears). Not listening, can’t happen, la-la-la-la-la….

Calm down, Candy. breathe deeply. Couldn’t possibly happen to David Fickling Books, fantastic publishers of the beautiful Tall Story, could it? How about you ask me another question, now.

OK. How did the WWC compare to other conferences or retreats you may have attended in the past?

Tactfully asking about SCBWI events? Caught you. Well it is different as it is a general event: all types of writing and writers are represented, with a huge range of workshops on pretty much everything you could imagine. Probably there is more for beginners than the SCBWI conferences offer. Of course, for specific information relating to writing or illustrating for children you can’t beat the SCBWI, but if you are interested in other areas and the wider writing world, this is the place to go.

A retreat is completely different. The SCBWI retreat this year was chilled, relaxed, you got time to really think about things, and talk to people. The WWC is frantic.

Relaxed attendees at this year's SCBWI retreat 


Are you glad you went? Would you go again?

Yes, and probably yes. I’ve been to the WWC three years in a row now, and I’d love to go every year. But it is the old finances and juggling time that comes into it also, and maybe if one has to go the SCBWI events are more relevant to me, personally

Any hints for those thinking of going next year?

Apply early: you give a list of agents, editors, writers and others you’d like to see for one-to-one appointments, which is included in the conference. You can have up to three. But the earlier you apply, the more likely you are to get who you want.

What is the accommodation like?

It’s not 5 star. It’s not four star. Or three... (you get where this is going?). Think typical student accommodation, and you get it. It is fine considering you’re only in your room to sleep, and not much for that. Take your own alarm clock, tea cup, hairdryer.
No it wasn't at all like these student digs.

How about the food?

Let’s just say packing snacks is a good plan if you are fussy like me.

How was it for networking: did you meet any agents, editors, famous writers?

There was a good sprinkle of authors, agents and editors about. You could spot them owing to the adoring crowds following them about and pushing each other out of the way to sit next to them at dinner.

Aspiring authors quietly approaching agents at the Winchester conference

Really.

Politely, of course: this is England. But seriously it was great to see how giving people were of their time, how willing to chat. Though there were stories of manuscripts being thrust into the hands of agents as they exit the loo. I prefer a more subtle approach to my stalking.

Do you have anything else you’d like to tell us?

No. I’m good.

Any, say, confessions you’d like to make?

No.

Confession is good for the soul.

Is it?

Well?

OKAY, fine!

One magnificent Candy Gourlay thought it would be cool to interview me for her blog about the conference, but owing to her impending departure to the Philippines for a whirlwind promotional tour of her amazing book Tall Story (editor's note: thanks for repeating this over and over and over again) was a bit pressed for time.

So…..?

Solution? I interviewed myself.
(bet you never saw that coming)

Thank you, Teri for so presumptuously interviewing yourself. Editors and publishers gagging for this immense if rather compulsive talent, you can fight over Teri via the contact page of the Writer's Coven website. No pushing, now! (From the Real Candy Gourlay)

More!

If you've stumbled on this old post and enjoyed it, you might want to know that Teri finally got a book deal with Orchard - and she's expecting triplets!

Share buttons bottom

POPULAR!