Straight talk from the sisters about blood, sweat and ink
If we were having coffee, we’d tell you winning a blog award – the Liebster Award – made our week. It’s a fun award and came to us from a blogger we adore. Big shout-out to Sara Letourneau for nominating us. If you don’t read her author blog, or one of the many blogs she contributes to (like DIY MFA), make plans to correct this oversight ASAP.
R: Heather and I both read mostly YA books (since that’s what we write) and our tastes are similar. I just read Twisted by Laurie Halse Anderson. It wasn’t so much that I enjoyed the story (it’s very dark and unsettling) but it had power! I felt emotionally drained after finishing it, as if I had lived the experiences with the characters. That is good writing!


R: I like pens, in particular the ones with ultra fine tips and gel ink. My two favorite pens are a Mont Blanc my late mother-in-law gave me, and one covered in Egyptian hieroglyphs and pictures.
Congrats on the award! What a fun coffee post. 🙂
Let’s see…I’m going with question 1. I’d really like to master the art of writing at length in second person. It’s so rarely done and done well, but I do enjoy it when someone does a great job.
Oh, new a great new post idea! 10 tips for writing in 2nd Person POV. Thanks, Diana! : )
Congrats on your award, ladies. 🙂
Thanks, Austin!
I think I will answer #4. I actually wrote a blog post about this way back in 2008 (https://corinajoyc.wordpress.com/2008/03/04/catching-fire/). It was in college. I had a professor that, on the first day of class, told us that what he wanted for each of us to do with our writing was to “catch fire”. Each class meeting he would send us away and ask us to “go write and catch fire”. One day, after sharing what I thought was either the best piece of writing ever or the worst ever, he looked at me sitting at the opposite end of a filled classroom and said, “Corina, you caught fire.” And I was lost…to writing.
Corina,
Wow, you studied under Arturo Islas!
*mouth hangs open in stunned silence*
That is a writing coach (and praise) worthy of being proud of!
Heather likes using library slips for bookmarks and Robin likes fall. Y’all are my kind of people.
My answer is for question 3: Have you ever revealed too much about yourself or family in your book or blog, or is every topic fair game?
I write memoir and creative nonfiction so this comes up for me, though I try to keep it out of my head during the writing process. I did write and have something published once that embarrassed someone, but it was because what they told me, that ended up in the story, was a lie. So they were caught publicly in a lie. Now I remind family and tell people everything is fodder. What I see, what I do, what you do, how you treat me.
If everything fair game? If someone asked me not to write something, I’d consider it. Otherwise, the only rule I work with is that I would NEVER write something out of spite or to hurt others. If an experience affects me and ends up being part of a work, I tell the story as truthfully as I can. I think Anne Lamott is the author who said if people want to be seen favorably, they should have treated you better. I agree. Advice: Treat people kindly, always. 🙂
This is a great answer, Tara. When you write about yourself and others, remembering to keep in check any angry feelings is so important. Blog writing shouldn’t ever be a tool for hurting others out of spite.
However, I don’t share your total openness. I like to keep my home life mostly quiet. But I also have kids, and they deserve to have some privacy.
😀 Loved reading your answers, Heather and Robin! It was a great way to get to know you both a little more. Robin, you’ve gone SCUBA diving? That’s awesome. I’d love to try that someday!
Um, if you ladies go to Hogwarts, can I go with you??? *lol*
As for your questions, I’ll answer your #11. If the WIP is a success, there are two things I already know I would do as a result:
1) Write more books, of course. *wink*
2) I’d love to be an in-person writing coach or teacher of some kind, maybe starting with occasional classes through non-for-profit creating writing organizations like Grub Street in Boston. That might not happen right away, but I want to “pay it forward” by sharing my knowledge and lessons with others and helping them make their stories as compelling and strong as they can be.
*Train leaving on Platform 9 3/4*
I’m saving you a seat, Sara. Hurry up and pack your trunk.
I’ll pick number 6. Have you ever given a one-star review? No! And I would never, either. I know from experience how hard and time-consuming it is to write a book, how much passion and pieces of an author’s soul goes into their words. For that reason alone I would never trash someone else’s work.
Robin: I love a series on Netflix entitled Twisted. Do you know if it was based on the book? If you’re not familiar, it’s about a high school boy who was accused of strangling his aunt (?) with a jump rope and sent away for years. He returns to his small town, hooks up with his two childhood best friends (both girls) and the story goes from there.
Loved learning more about the two of you!
Your Netflix Twisted sounds like it has the right vibe to be an extension of my book’s world building, but it’s not from the same story as far as I can tell.
The book focuses on a boy returning to high school after being convicted of vandalism. He goes from being the kid no one knows (the gamer geek) to being the focus of too much attention. His life spirals out control. Every school crime is pinned on him, including a rape he didn’t commit. His family is also falling apart, his parent marriage is over and they have lost faith in him. They want to send him away to military school and forget about him. He wants to kill himself and end the pain. It’s very dark stuff!
That was fun to read; thanks for sharing it. That SCUBA (SQUBA?) thing is pretty cool. I’ve dived a lot but never helped an archeological team with shipwrecks, and I have no excuse because there are a ton of shipwrecks in Florida where I live!
And Heather, how do you say you grandmother sensed you were having a tricky time – and then not tell is what it is??? Talk about baiting a reader.
Okay, here goes. You said pick one question so I picked at random.
What author’s style do you admire the most?
Mark Twain. Lame, right? Yawn. How many of us were forced to read Tom Sawyer in school? And why does a book tend to suck when you’re forced to read it in school? Anyway, if what somebody wrote during the Ulysses S. Grant administration can still make people laugh on their iPads, they’ve done it right, and that’s my take on Twain. Not freaking Tom Sawyer, which I first saw as a musical, for god’s sake, but the stuff he did after that, the hilarious essays and speeches. The man is still quotable and timely today even if you don’t attribute the quote to him.
Why Twain when there are so many other – hipper, trendier – writers?
I was working on a story and happened to need a bit of inspiration, and I remembered something funny I thought he’d said. I didn’t think to Google it, because why make life easy, so I went to Amazon to see if he had eBooks. I could buy the eBook, look up what I needed, and if the eBook was expensive, I’d just return it. Don’t look at me like that. You’ve kept the tag in a blouse for the same reason, and didn’t even get a story out of it.
Anyway, I was 100 pages into an eBook of his essays before I realized it. I didn’t find the quote, but I debated returning the book because, well, I’m a good Catholic boy and it’s wrong to do… just about everything. So I took a deep breath and happened to glance at a bookshelf about five feet from my writing desk (Doesn’t it sound nicer when I call it that instead of the coffee table? I think so, too.)
There, encased behind glass my five year old had yet to break, was a colorful display of classic books I’d bought right after college and had probably only recently paid off. Physical books that had more or less become the paper equivalent of wall art. I opened the case and sure enough, next to Edgar Allen Poe and the Brothers Grimm (a lot of their stuff is different from the Disney version. Who knew? The Rapunzel is actually kinda slutty.) was The Complete Works of Mark Twain. I opened it up and saw on glorious cellulose the very information I’d been looking for. And, having paid for the words once, I had no thoughts of burning in Hell for returning the eBook. (Sorry, Sister Mary Ann. God understands overpaying.)
In the “complete” works – which it wasn’t, and it even said so right after you opened the book, so I felt even less guilty about the eBook return – was an essay titled How To Tell A Story. Well, I thought, let’s see if the old guy’s still got it. Maybe I can learn about writing from one of the masters.
It was a rambling piece explaining about why humor is so hard to do, and since humor is what I usually attempt, it seemed especially fitting. The best part was when he explained that some southern gentlemen types will tell a rambling story, going on and on sometimes in great detail about a particularly small segment of the story, wandering off the main vein trying to recall a man’s name who plays a small bit in the overall piece, and to explain that while his role is small it was also not super important (I think that may be a direct quote – Twain actually said super important) and then after going waaaaaaaaaaay down that road, he gives up and ABANDONS IT, goes back to the main story, remembers the man’s name a few minutes later, and as the reader or audience takes a collective sigh for taking us down a blind alley dead end that he subsequently un-dead ended, he stops and admits Oh yeah, that guy wasn’t actually in this story, forget about that – and goes right on with his main piece.
I was rolling. I think audiences have been rolling in the aisles over that one for 150 years. I’d love to do something like that in a book or a speech, just to see the reaction. It was almost performance art, and it was brilliant – even 150 years later. So I’m a bit more respectful when people wax poetically about F Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby (another forced read) and his green light shining over the water of East Egg, or my cousin’s irrepressible thirst for all things Hogwarts or whatever, because when a particular itch has been scratched, it is a thing of relief, but when something beautiful and amazing happens, opening the eyes of your imagination in ways you never knew possible, it might be a defining moment in your life as a reader or author, and it only leaves you wanting more.
Harry Potter may get there but Twain already did, and although they paint in different colors, that’s still something insanely impressive.
I’m also a fan of Twain. You’re right, his work is just as funny today as it was in his own day. Even my kids crack up with I read Roughing It aloud to them. : )
Congratulations on the award 😀 It was great to learn more about your history, what led you to blogging, and the things you enjoy. All your questions are great, though some of them are really tough! I’m going to answer question 4 – my most memorable writing comment came from Taylor Grace. It was a comment about how much she liked my characters in Hands of Evil, that she got the sense they would make awesome friends. She really understood them, saw them as I do in my head – it’s the best kind of compliment. Have a great weekend 🙂
Wow, a fantastic example of how a single comment can make your day. It’s what all writers hope for, a perfect connection to the reader. Lucky you! : )
Congratulations, I loved your answers! It really felt like an interview (I used to interview a lot of people, and well the interview feel comes across perfectly).
I don’t want to ruin the fun, and will give your questions a shot 🙂
1. If you could instantaneously master one writing skill, what would you choose and why?
2. What author’s style do you admire the most?
I think that I’d have to say Bruce Chatwin, combining fiction, history and own experiences in his travel books is just amazing.
3. Have you ever revealed too much about yourself or family in your book or blog, or is every topic fair game?
When I was on Facebook I do believe that I revealed too much, but well I left when I was 21, so I blame my age… No, on my blog I am not revealing too much I think, my family members and friends only get initials or nicknames (little one for my daughter), but that might change as I plan to share my mother’s website and my sister’s blog in the future…
4. What is the most memorable writing comment you’ve ever gotten? It can be the best, or worst; you decide.
During this years A to Z challenge, I received this commet “Will you be compiling these flash pieces into a book? Illustrated? (I’m hoping: yes, and yes.)”, what a compliment!
5. When is your muse most active? Are you a night owl, or a member of the 5am club?
When my daughter is sleeping and my fiancé is at work, so that means mornings or her nap time. But sometimes I cannot go to sleep as my muse is whispering into my ears.
6. Have you ever given a book a 1 star review? If so, why? No book titles, please. : )
One star? I don’t think so, I think that’S the type of book that I don’t continue reading and thus cannot review. I don’T give out stars, I just try to write a fair review.
7. What is the next big thing you want to write about?
I have a time traveling story unravelling in my head, don’t tell anyone just yet. And on my blog I’d like to talk about my thoughts on feminism.
8. Do you have any writing rituals? If not, name one thing that always makes you excited to write?
Erm, no not yet. But I think that I really enjoy writing into my moleskin.
9. What is the single most important quality in a novel, what must an author do to win you over?
I have to be able to relate to a character, I mean be able to picture them and want to accompany them in their adventure.
10. If you could magically fix one problem with your current WIP, what would you fix?
I would manage to transfer my thoughts onto paper without having to write them down.
11. If your blog, or a book suddenly made you rich and famous, what would you do with your success?
Oh that would be so nice, but that’s a bit far away at the moment, but a goal yeah. So what would I do, I think go on a nice book tour that will enable me to visit friends and family all over.
Thanks for asking all of these great and fun questions! Have a great weekend!
Hi Solveig,
We actually had you on our list of three bloggers we thought might not already have a Liebster Award. I guess we should have just stuck with a super small list, because you come through like a champ! I think you totally earned the award with these fantastic answers.
I hereby grant you the Liebster Award. Grab a badge and go forth and make your own questions for bloggers to answer. May you have better luck finding ten blogger to bestow the award on than we did. : )
I love your answers. I would have the same basic answer to number 9 as yours. I need to feel eager about joining the protagonist’s adventure. If I don’t care, I don’t keep reading.