Showing posts with label writing process. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writing process. Show all posts
Sunday, December 1, 2019
Wednesday, April 24, 2019
Wednesday, April 17, 2019
Wednesday, April 10, 2019
Wednesday, April 3, 2019
How Do You Get Your Work in the Public Eye?
I found this to be an interesting read. I'm not a visual artist, but it got me to thinking about how I can take my work into different places and spaces.
Where to Show Your Work
Where to Show Your Work
Wednesday, March 27, 2019
You Don't Know Dan
Icon and hero. I don't care what this article says, Dan Jenkins will never die.
Dan Jenkins obituary.
Dan Jenkins obituary.
Monday, March 18, 2019
Finish What You Have Started
I keep track of production by word count. I aim for 2K words or more a week. I also have a goal of one short story a month. In 2017 I wrote 15. In 2018 I wrote 12. So far, in 2019, I have not finished one SS. It is March. I'm getting antsy. Don't get me wrong, I'm being productive, I just haven't finished a SS. It is a special feeling, finishing a story. Accomplishment. I need my fix. I started a SS in January and it kept going, January, and going, February, and going. I finally wrote THE END today.
I'm not finished, mind you. Still a lot of polishing to do, but I got to THE END. The story is called 'The Year Walk' or 'Solstice Nights,' not sure yet. It clocks in at around 11,500 words, which technically makes it a novelette, not a SS. Don't care.
I got to the end.
I'm not finished, mind you. Still a lot of polishing to do, but I got to THE END. The story is called 'The Year Walk' or 'Solstice Nights,' not sure yet. It clocks in at around 11,500 words, which technically makes it a novelette, not a SS. Don't care.
I got to the end.
Sunday, March 17, 2019
Saturday, September 16, 2017
Basic Economic Questions of Writing
Writing for the sake of writing is all well and good. Writing because you have stories to tell or purely for the sake of the craft is fine but if you want to pursue writing as a career, you must write with purpose and that purpose is to get paid.
With that in mind, writing, like all businesses must be carefully thought out. Professional writers have a business plan. They think about marketing, production and efficiency.
I’m not saying place business ahead of the craft, but take into consideration the business elements when thinking about the craft. Consider not just plot, character arc, and structure but also market, distribution and production. Who are you writing for if you want to get paid? Ultimately you are writing for readers but your first readers, unless you go straight to self publishing, are generally editors. What editors of magazines and journals and book publishing houses are looking for is a tricky proposition.
Start with the basic economic questions:
What are you producing?
This is the part where craft is king. What are your strengths as a writer? Think about length (short stories or novels) and genres. Most people write general fiction. General fiction or literary fiction is a crowded market, making it tough to break through and sell.
How are you producing?
How much time can you realistically spend writing. How productive do you think you will be in creating finished product to send out into the market?
For whom are you producing?
What is your market? Do you want an agent? Are you targeting a book deal or magazines? When you have fully explored the ‘what’ question, the ‘for whom’ question becomes more clear.
I will discuss this topic in more detail in coming weeks. Point I am making in this post is more writers need to seriously consider the business of writing.
With that in mind, writing, like all businesses must be carefully thought out. Professional writers have a business plan. They think about marketing, production and efficiency.
I’m not saying place business ahead of the craft, but take into consideration the business elements when thinking about the craft. Consider not just plot, character arc, and structure but also market, distribution and production. Who are you writing for if you want to get paid? Ultimately you are writing for readers but your first readers, unless you go straight to self publishing, are generally editors. What editors of magazines and journals and book publishing houses are looking for is a tricky proposition.
Start with the basic economic questions:
What are you producing?
This is the part where craft is king. What are your strengths as a writer? Think about length (short stories or novels) and genres. Most people write general fiction. General fiction or literary fiction is a crowded market, making it tough to break through and sell.
How are you producing?
How much time can you realistically spend writing. How productive do you think you will be in creating finished product to send out into the market?
For whom are you producing?
What is your market? Do you want an agent? Are you targeting a book deal or magazines? When you have fully explored the ‘what’ question, the ‘for whom’ question becomes more clear.
I will discuss this topic in more detail in coming weeks. Point I am making in this post is more writers need to seriously consider the business of writing.
Tuesday, September 5, 2017
Moses and the Angry Filmmaker
Back in 2010 I
had the good fortune to be co-director of the Fearless Film Festival. Fearless
was a short lived short film festival associated with Main Street Arts Fest,
one of the largest arts festivals in the country.
The featured
speaker that year was a writer and filmmaker named Kelley Baker.
Kelley hails
from Portland, Oregon and has been in the film business for many years. He is
known as The Angry Filmmaker and has written the landmark book on the fine art
of extreme low budget filmmaking, The Angry Filmmaker Survival Guide.
Kelley tours the
country showing his films and lecturing on filmmaking and for years traveled
with his dog, Moses. We had booked Kelley and Moses in a nice downtown hotel
that accepted dogs. I was looking forward to the festival, everything seemed ready.
Of course,
everything was not ready. We received a call from Kelley the day before the
festival kicked off and were told that the hotel had neglected to tinform us dogs
were indeed welcome to stay at the hotel, as long as they were under 15 pounds.
Moses was a black lab who’s head likely weighed more than 15 pounds.
Scrambling
ensued. Calls were made. Did I mention the film festival coincided with Main
Street Arts Festival? Not only were no hotels available that accommodated large
dogs, no hotels were available.
It was finally
decided that Kelley would bunk with me for the weekend. It wasn’t ideal, I’m a
bit of a private person, but the show must go on.
Friday afternoon
Kelley’s big white van pulled into my driveway. Kelley got out, walked around
and opened the side door and Moses slowly climbed out. Moses was a road dog and
had racked up a lot of miles. The old boy had trouble getting around, Kelley
had to help him up my front steps, but he was sweet, smart and adorable.
Friday evening
at Fearless passed without fanfare. Good attendance and the programs were well
received. We returned to my house and sat on the porch for hours, talking films
and work.
Saturday was to
be the marathon. The programs kicked off late morning and ran until almost
midnight. Moses had to be cooped up all day inside my house. Kelley assured me
Moses was used to being inside for great lengths of time and would be
fine.
When we returned
to my house shortly before midnight, I walked up the porch, opened the door
and, without describing what I actually saw, knew immediately that Moses had
passed on.
I froze. I did
not know what to do. To be honest the next few minutes are a blur. I felt
awkward and somehow, at least indirectly, responsible. Kelley felt worse, of
course. He had lost his best friend and traveling companion. We muddled
through.
Kelley is one of
those rare people you are fortunate enough to meet in life who instantly feels like you have
known forever. He is a good and hyper creative man. Over the ensuing years I have picked his mind
about filmmaking, writing and the struggle of being an independent artist.
His new book is
entitled, Road Dog. You guessed it,
the book is about his years on the road with Moses. It is funny, informative,
honest and heartwarming.
Kelley is on the
road again and will be in the Fort Worth and Dallas this October. Look for
dates and more information in the coming weeks. In the mean time, order his
books and films and make plans on meeting him when he rolls through Fort Worth and Dallas. You will
not regret it.
Here is the press release for the book:
Available March 2017
328 pages, Paperback
ISBN 9781540713520
$ 17.95 USD
“As Eat, Pray, Love is to love and spirituality Road
Dog is to the raucous, independent, and contented life.”
- William M. Akers, author, Your Screenplay Sucks!, Mrs. Ravenback's Way
“Often funny, sometimes touching and always entertaining,
Kelley Baker’s Road Dog is a great
read that will make you laugh a lot, cry a little and appreciate the important
people (two legged or four) in your life more.”
- Nic Brown, author, Werewolves, Zombies & Leprechauns: Tales
From the World of Werewolf For Hire.
A Man, His Dog and
The Open Road. What Could Go Wrong?
With no distributor interested in
his independent films, Kelley Baker, the Angry Filmmaker, ripped a page out of
the punk rock handbook and went looking for his audience in a used minivan with
his faithful 120 pound Chocolate Lab, Moses. Every fall and spring they
traveled the country showing his films at art house theaters, film festivals,
colleges, and biker bars.
Logging over two hundred thousand
miles, they encountered a collection of Fellini-esque characters including two
hyper-intellectual pro wrestlers in West Virginia, a lying Chicago hotel desk
clerk who cost Kelley his home, civil rights workers knocking back rum at Hank
Williams’ grave, and a way
overzealous drug sniffing border patrol dog outside El Paso, Texas.
Kelley gave an audio workshop for
employees of a porn channel, got yelled at in a haunted bar in Memphis, was
asked to leave the Prayer Tower at Oral Roberts University, and drove
twenty-four hundred miles in three days so he wouldn’t miss his daughter’s
choir recital. Moses swam in two oceans, fifteen lakes, and enthusiastically
marked thousands of spots from sea to shining sea.
At the end of it all they found a
lot more than an audience.
About the author
A graduate of USC’s film school, Kelley has a BA and an MFA
in film production. He is an author, (Road
Dog, The Angry Filmmaker Survival Guide: Part One & Part Two) and an Independent Filmmaker. He has
written and directed three full‑length features (Birddog, The Gas Café, &
Kicking Bird), eight short films, and quite a few documentaries. His films have aired on PBS, Canadian and
Australian television, and have been shown at Film Festivals including London,
Sydney, Annecy, Sao Paulo, Sundance, Chicago, and Edinburgh. He was the sound
designer on six of Gus Van Sant's feature films including, My Own Private Idaho,
Good
Will Hunting, and Finding Forrester, and Todd Haynes
film, Far From Heaven.
To learn more about Kelley and his work we invite you to
check out his website, www.angryfilmmaker.com, for more information.
Friday, September 1, 2017
Belonging
Writing is, in most cases, solitary work. It is easy to get
stuck inside a bubble. However, if the goal is to publish, and most, if not all
writing should be done with the goal of publishing, then a writer must exit the
bubble, at some point, and seek an audience.
The first audience a writer seeks should be friendly, but
critical. An important part of the writing process is feedback and in most
instances, the best initial feedback is from other writers.
I have belonged to a critique group for a couple of years.
These writers have provided me with essential feedback. This group has been an
essential ingredient to my growth as a writer.
There have been, over time, six to eight other writers in the group, all
strong writers with a good critical eye. I have learned from their feedback of
my stories and from reading their work and watching their progress as writers.
We push each other, encourage each other and find emotional support.
General audience readers, friends, family and the like are
great and serve a purpose, but it is not as valuable as belonging to a group of
people that understand writing and the process.
Find a group, it is not always easy, you may have to join a
few or even several to find the right fit.
Make it a priority, it will make you better.
Monday, August 21, 2017
The Lindbergh Baby and Blank Stares
I've been writing all day, which means the laundry is done, dishes are washed, and I finally changed the burned out bulb in the shower. When I told my daughter I had changed the
bulb she was shocked and asked how many dead bugs I found in the globe. I told
her I found 17,612 dead bugs and the Lindbergh baby.
Blank stare.
I need to update my references.
Blank stare.
I need to update my references.
Writer’s life, a constant
struggle.
I’m writing the next to
last story arc in We’re for Smoke:
Outlaws and Outliers in Fort Worth. It is the story of a woman named Mary
Rea. Mary married into a prominent family in Fort Worth with a long and storied
background in law enforcement. Mary’s story is sad, she suffered from mental
illness her entire life. Mental illness was poorly diagnosed and treated at the
turn of the last century. Mary was luckier than most, since she had money she
was merely shunned and ignored. If you were from a lower case you were likely
put on the streets or dropped off in jail.
I have had a hard time
wrapping my mind around Mary and the other major character in the story, Judge
Swayne. The Judge figures in other story lines and should be a strong character
throughout the entire book. Problem is he is not. I simply cannot find his
voice. I don’t know why, he should be low hanging fruit for a writer. He has a
strong personality, he was Fort Worth’s first progressive voice. He moved the
city into the 20th century in many, important ways, both from the bench
and as a major player in the good ole boy circle. For whatever reason he seems
to fall flat with me.
Mary Rea also is giving
me a bit of a fit. I’m not sure how to properly portray her illness and
situation. I have been putting off writing the section for weeks, waiting for
them to make themselves better known.
They have not shown
themselves. So I soldier on. I am putting words on paper. Telling their story
best I can. I am hoping for that eureka moment when maybe they will take over.
It has not happened yet.
It is a great feeling
when you slip into a story and it flows like a river.
But a writer, writes, so
I’m writing. In film if things don’t go perfect on set, the catch phrase is, ‘we’ll
fix it in post.’ In writing, when the first draft is less than hoped for, well,
there is always a second draft.
Or a third…
Or fourth. No excerpt this week. It is not ready for daylight.
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