Showing posts with label Clarion West 2011. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clarion West 2011. Show all posts
Monday, August 25, 2014
Upcoming Event: Panel at NerdCon
I'm excited to announce that I will be presenting a panel at the first Rocket City NerdCon. I'll share photographs and stories from my experiences at Clarion West and Kij Johnson's Beginning Novel Workshop at the University of Kansas. I'll discuss the benefits of residential writing workshops and compare them with the experience of getting an MFA.
Everyone who attends will get a resource sheet, some writing goodies, and I will do a giveaway for several awesome prizes! I'd love to see you there!
Here's the panel description:
When: Friday, October 24th, 7:30PM
Title: Residential Science Fiction and Fantasy Workshops
Description: What is it like to attend a writing workshop that lasts six weeks? Or even two? Clarion West graduate Jenni Moody will give a presentation on the benefits of residential writing workshops and will share stories about her time at one of the most prestigious genre workshops in the world.
Age group: Family
For more information about NerdCon, visit their Facebook page or buy your ticket on their website.
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
2011 Westies Anthologized
My Clarion West classmates have had a pretty rockin year so far with stories in anthologies and collections. If you are looking for some good short stories to read, I highly recommend checking these out.
First up is S.L. Gilbow's new short story collection. I've been waiting for Gilbow to put out a collection of his own ever since I met him. His stories are amazing. They're the kind that pull you in so close that they silence a loud room, and grip you so tightly that you ache for days. Elegant with a feeling of the best classic science fiction, these are stories that you'll remember and want to share with others. There are five stories in this collection, each one beautifully crafted. I hope one day there's a print edition, so that I can add Gilbow to my shelves with my other favorite authors. You can get your copy here.
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Next up is an anthology with two of my classmates' stories: Corinne Duyvis' Week 6 story at Clarion West, "The Applause of Others," and "Fisheye" by Maria Romasco-Moore. Corinne's story is set in Amsterdam, full of lovely city details. If you haven't read a story by Maria Romasco-Moore yet, you are missing out on some of the most beautiful and delightfully, wittily weird writing. In addition to Corinne and Maria's stories, the line up is stellar. Check out the Table of Contents and then maybe get a copy.
Jei D. Marcade's story "Superhero Girl" is out in bookstores (like Barnes & Noble and such) in the anthology Super Heroes. Read this cool interview with Jei about the story that was originally published in Fantasy Magazine and learn the word for the storytelling technique you've probably been trying to pull off for years. Jei uses it seamlessly in this story. It is, in my mind, the textbook example (in addition to just being an all-around amazing story.) Go Jei!
Alisa Alering was a winner of the Writers of the Future Contest this year. Her story "Everything You Have Seen" is in the newest compilation (Volume 29), out everywhere! This is a gorgeous, haunting story told in the lyric-crisp language that I love in all of Alisa's stories. At the awards ceremony, dancers interpreted the story, in what I think was the best performance of the evening. Read her awesome story, then head over to her blog where she's recounting the WOTF winner experience.
The rest of my Westie friends are doing amazing things - managing magazines, starting novels, finishing novels, publishing short stories in magazines all over the place. I'll do another check-in soon with some cool story pubs in journals and magazines. Go CAAMF! :)
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
Walks at Clarion West
Unless you bring a car to Clarion West, you'll probably do a lot of walking. Walk to buy groceries, go out to eat, go to the Tuesday readings, and just to get out of the house and mull over story ideas.
The weather in Seattle in the summer is wonderful. Perfect for long walks. And there are sidewalks everywhere. Not the kind of sidewalks where a tiny bit of paved walkway is so close to the busy street that it isn't safe. Big sidewalks. And if you take the residential route down to the shopping areas, it's peppered with sculptural trees,
bordered by beautiful houses,
garnished with lovely bits of strangeness.
I always took the residential route when going down to eat at Wayward Vegan Cafe. The roads were quieter (except for the one frat house that had a pool and basketball court in the front yard) and the walking helped me decompress after the morning crit sessions.
Walking every day became part of my writing routine, and when I came home from Clarion West I threaded it into my life. The workshop had an overwhelmingly positive impact on my writing, but it also yielded some unexpected benefits, like a healthy walking habit.
The deadline to apply to the 2013 Clarion West Writers Workshop is March 1st. If you're thinking of applying, I'd like to give you a friendly nudge. (Do it! Apply!! APPLY!!)
This workshop is amazing. You'll come out the other side with so many writing friends, at least 5 new stories, a better understanding of your style, a good idea of your weaknesses and how to work on them, and the drive to keep on writing. Or at least, that's a few of the things Clarion West gave to me.
The deadline is this Friday - go here and submit your best writing. Good luck!
Tuesday, December 18, 2012
Clarion West Class of 2011: Publications and Sales, 2012
This has been a wonderful year for my Clarion West class. Here's a highlight of some of the big moments for my classmates, with a list of publications following.
Alisa Alering
Corinne Duyvis
S.L. Gilbow
Cassie Krahe
Jenni Moody
Jack Nicholls
Mark Pantoja
Maria Romasco-Moore
Nick Tramdack
Book Publication!
Corinne Duyvis sold her first book! Here's the announcement: "Corinne Duyvis’s debut OTHERBOUND, where a seventeen-year-old boy finds that every time he closes his eyes, he is drawn into the body of a mute servant girl from another world — a world that is growing increasingly more dangerous, and where many things are not as they seem, to Maggie Lehrman at Amulet, by Ammi-Joan Paquette at Erin Murphy Literary Agency (World English)."Writers of the Future Amazingness!
2011 Westies also did stellar work in the Writers of the Future Contest. Nick Tramdack, Mark Pantoja, and Alisa Alering were all finalists, with Alisa Alering going on to win the 4th Quarter! She'll be at the Writers of the Future workshop in LA with Nina Kiriki Hoffman this year, and is eligible for the grand prize. I'll be watching the stream of the awards ceremony and cheering her on.Editorial Prowess!
David Rees-Thomas co-founded Waylines: Speculative Fiction and Film. He and co-founder Darryl Knickrehm ran a successful Kickstarter campaign to fund the magazine, and the first issue will be out in January 2013.Anthology Power!
One of the instructors at Clarion West is almost always an editor. Our wonderful editor in residence was L. Timmel Duchamp of Aqueduct Press. During her week of teaching, she gave us all a call for submission to a new anthology she was editing and encouraged us to submit. The concept is really interesting, one that I think my fellow English composition teachers would like: it is a collection of the untold stories behind famous characters, presented in a Wikipedia-like format. All in all, stories by seven of the Clarion West class of 2011 will appear in this anthology: Missing Links and Secret Histories: A Selection of Wikipedia Entries Lost, Suppressed, or Misplaced in Time. Cheers to Jeremy, Anne, Jenni (me!), Alisa, John, Cassie and Nick!
Here's a list of publications and other writing credits that have been sold or published in 2012. Check out these great stories!
Alisa Alering
- "Keith Crust's Lucky Numbers." Flash Fiction Online. Forthcoming 2013.
- "Madeline Usher Usher." Missing Links and Secret Histories: A Selection of Wikipedia Entries Lost, Suppressed, or Misplaced in Time. Ed. L. Timmel Duchamp. Aqueduct Press. Forthcoming.
- "Delicious." Every Day Fiction. 14 May 2012.
- Otherbound. YA novel to be published by Amulet Press in 2014.
- Represented by Ammi-Joan Paquette of the Erin Murphy Literary Agency
- Goodreads page
- Blog posts: "That Time I Sold a Book" and "The Timeline of That Book Deal Thing"
- Interview at Query Tracker
S.L. Gilbow
- "Alarms." Lightspeed Magazine. March 2012.
Eliza Hirsch
- "A Map of the Heart." (Con)viction anthology. Forthcoming February 2013.
- "A Dancer for Aonou." Kaleidotrope. Summer 2012.
- "Walking Home." Daily Science Fiction. Forthcoming.
- Clarion West Submission Story
Jenni Moody
- "Traffic Jam." SpringGun. Issue 7. Forthcoming.
- "Peter Rabbit." Missing Links and Secret Histories: A Selection of Wikipedia Entries Lost, Suppressed, or Misplaced in Time. Ed. L. Timmel Duchamp. Aqueduct Press. Forthcoming.
Jack Nicholls
- "Running Wild." Aurealis, Issue 54, September 2012.
- Clarion West Week 3 Story
- "The Statues of Melbourne." Andromeda Spaceways Inflight Magazine. Issue 56, 2012.
- Clarion West Submission Story
- "The Tale of the Aggrieved Astrologer." Beneath Ceaseless Skies. Issue #101. August 9th, 2012.
- Clarion West Week 6 story
- "The End." Tales of World War Z: Fan Fiction and Stories of the Zombie Apocalypse. 4 July 2012.
- Clarion West Week 2 Story
- "A Darker Cycle." Nihilist SF. Issue 1. 26 November 2012.
- Blog post about the process of revising this story
- Clarion West Week 6 Story
- "Houses." Miette's Bedtime Story Podcast. 8 September 2012.
- Clarion West Week 4 Story
- "Buck." Writers of the Future Finalist, 2nd Quarter. 2012.
- Clarion West Week 5 Story
David Rees-Thomas
- Co-founder and Fiction Editor, Waylines: Speculative Fiction and Film
- Kickstarter project
- "Waylines Magazine: An Inside Look." Blog feature by Alisa Alering.
Maria Romasco-Moore
- "The Great Loneliness." Unstuck. Issue 2. December 2012.
- Clarion West Submission Story
Jeremy Sim
Anne Toole
- "Fleep." Waylines Magazine. Forthcoming.
- Clarion West Week 5 Story
Anne Toole
- "The Red Bandit." The Digital Wall. 2012
- Reprint of "Night in the Library." Originally published in Crossed Genres. Issue # 3. February 2009.
Nick Tramdack
- "Ligne Claire." Andromeda Spaceways Inflight Magazine. Issue 57. 2012.
- Clarion West Week 1 Story
- "Triple Bind." New Myths. Issue 20. September 2012.
- "Legend of the Secret Masterpiece." Shanghai Steam: A Steampunk Wuxia Anthology. 2012.
- Clarion West Week 6 story
- "The Comeback." Phantasmacore. 27 April 2012.
- Finalist, 4th Quarter, Writers of the Future, 2011.
- Clarion West Week 2 Story
- "Cold Embrace." Ray Gun Revival. Issue 14, Vol.2. 2012.
- Clarion West Week 4 Story
- "Driving for Peanuts." Toasted Cake. Episode 23. 3 Jun 2012.
- Text version available here on Alberto's website.
- "Recognizing Gabe: un cuento de hadas." Strange Horizons. 16 Jan 2012.
- Audio version at PodCastle, Episode 235. Read by Brian Lieberman. 23 Nov. 2012.
- Clarion West Week 5 Story
Congrats to all of my Clarion West classmates on a great year of writing!
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
Ready, Set, {Pause}, Workshop!
In workshops where there are a large number of participants, the critique from each member most likely has a time limit. At Clarion West, we had seventeen people plus an instructor critique each story. To make sure everyone was able to speak about the story, each person was allowed a maximum of 3 minutes for feedback.
As an incentive to keep within that time frame, we were each given four or so tickets at the beginning of the week. If you felt strongly about a story and wanted to keep going after the polite tap on the table (or awkward gong of a half-full aluminum water bottle), then you could rip up one of your tickets and keep going. But on Friday there were drawings for wonderful prizes, and your tickets were your chance to win.
Three minutes can feel like a long time if you're doing a presentation in front of a class. But if you're speaking about a story and trying to articulate what did and didn't work for you as a reader, then three minutes is never enough time.
Our first full-story critiques happened in week two. The first day of workshop I tried to cram in as much information as I could during my 3 minutes. I had a list of bullet points and I rattled them off, not really going into detail on any one point. I also wanted to appear competent to my classmates and instructor, and I think this often happens to writers during the first critique session at any workshop.
Then it was my turn. My story was ripped apart. Not unkindly. Not without caring words for what was working in the story. And in many ways the critique I received during that first round of stories propelled me to try my hardest during each submission cycle at the workshop.
But after the crit session had ended that day I didn't go to lunch with my classmates. I felt bombarded with feedback. I escaped to my room and stayed there for an hour in the quiet. During that time I thought about what was important to me as a writer. Which feedback had been most useful.
It wasn't the laundry list of things to fix. It was the moments when a classmate took the time to explore an area or two of my story, to really dig in deep. Or when they responded to an idea brought up earlier in the critique session. During these types of critiques my classmates usually spoke more slowly. Without the pre-listed bullet points, the critiques were more conversational. They reached me in a way that a list of Dittos couldn't.
These types of critiques worked for me because I felt connected to my classmates. Oddly, I was able to separate my work from my self more easily when I felt like my classmate addressed me directly. Maybe because the sense of them wanting to help me succeed came through more clearly. Or maybe the whole experience just felt less overwhelming.
So I decided to do something different with my responses. I still only had a few minutes for each critique, but each time I sacrificed a few of those precious moments to make a connection with the person whose story I was critiquing.
"Hey Mark."
"Hey Alisa."
"Hey Jei."
I think some people may have thought it was silly, but after a while it caught on and other people started doing it, too. And in the end my critiques were the better for this moment of pause, of connection.
As an incentive to keep within that time frame, we were each given four or so tickets at the beginning of the week. If you felt strongly about a story and wanted to keep going after the polite tap on the table (or awkward gong of a half-full aluminum water bottle), then you could rip up one of your tickets and keep going. But on Friday there were drawings for wonderful prizes, and your tickets were your chance to win.
Three minutes can feel like a long time if you're doing a presentation in front of a class. But if you're speaking about a story and trying to articulate what did and didn't work for you as a reader, then three minutes is never enough time.
Our first full-story critiques happened in week two. The first day of workshop I tried to cram in as much information as I could during my 3 minutes. I had a list of bullet points and I rattled them off, not really going into detail on any one point. I also wanted to appear competent to my classmates and instructor, and I think this often happens to writers during the first critique session at any workshop.
| The critique room at Clarion West 2011 |
Then it was my turn. My story was ripped apart. Not unkindly. Not without caring words for what was working in the story. And in many ways the critique I received during that first round of stories propelled me to try my hardest during each submission cycle at the workshop.
But after the crit session had ended that day I didn't go to lunch with my classmates. I felt bombarded with feedback. I escaped to my room and stayed there for an hour in the quiet. During that time I thought about what was important to me as a writer. Which feedback had been most useful.
It wasn't the laundry list of things to fix. It was the moments when a classmate took the time to explore an area or two of my story, to really dig in deep. Or when they responded to an idea brought up earlier in the critique session. During these types of critiques my classmates usually spoke more slowly. Without the pre-listed bullet points, the critiques were more conversational. They reached me in a way that a list of Dittos couldn't.
These types of critiques worked for me because I felt connected to my classmates. Oddly, I was able to separate my work from my self more easily when I felt like my classmate addressed me directly. Maybe because the sense of them wanting to help me succeed came through more clearly. Or maybe the whole experience just felt less overwhelming.
So I decided to do something different with my responses. I still only had a few minutes for each critique, but each time I sacrificed a few of those precious moments to make a connection with the person whose story I was critiquing.
"Hey Mark."
"Hey Alisa."
"Hey Jei."
I think some people may have thought it was silly, but after a while it caught on and other people started doing it, too. And in the end my critiques were the better for this moment of pause, of connection.
Wednesday, November 7, 2012
Waylines Magazine: New Market for SF Stories and Films
David Rees-Thomas was in my Clarion West class in 2011. He's a wonderful fellow - a sharp reader, a lovely poet, and a good friend. He's been a Managing Editor at Ideomancer for a while, and he's decided to start his own magazine along with Darryl Knickrehm, whom I do not know but who has stellar design skills.
I'm going to back this project on Kickstarter because as a writer I want to support great new venues for the fiction I love to read and write. And I know this is going to be a wonderful magazine.
Here's a quick peek at their Kickstarter progress, in case you'd like to contribute, too.
The new magazine is called Waylines: Speculative Fiction and Film. They're looking for submissions of short stories and short films. Their website is professional and easy to navigate, and they will pay $40 per story. It's a great market, and I'm looking forward to reading the first issue.
There's also a Kickstarter project, where you can get very cool postcards and such along with issues of the magazine.
Here's their Kickstarter video. It's short (under 3 minutes) and is really well-done.
I'm going to back this project on Kickstarter because as a writer I want to support great new venues for the fiction I love to read and write. And I know this is going to be a wonderful magazine.
Here's a quick peek at their Kickstarter progress, in case you'd like to contribute, too.
Monday, May 14, 2012
A Name Against the Nothing
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| Artax in the Swamp of Sadness, from The Neverending Story |
A few times at Clarion West, on the Sunday evenings when we met our instructor for the week, we would be asked to go around the table and describe the kinds of stories we wrote.
Occasionally, I'd be asked the same question at the Friday night parties, and at other random moments, like when I went to the comic book store in search of a poster for my bare dorm room walls.
"You're a writer? Cool! What kind of stories do you write?"
I was supposed to know this, right? Or at least be figuring it out.
I started to have a bit of an identity crisis.
"Fantasy," I'd say. "But not like elves kind of fantasy. Other kind of fantasy."
Or I'd list my favorite authors. Kelly Link. Margo Lanagan. Elizabeth Hand. John Crowley.
But it didn't quite work. I needed a place on the grid, a way to plot myself among the writers I was learning from.
I needed a name.
On one of those Sunday evening roundtables, Alisa Alering gave a great description of her stories, which I now cannot remember word for word. But from her description, I embraced my own. I wrote stories where strange things happened to normal people.
This helped, but it wasn't until recently that I found a name that I am comfortable wearing.
During my thesis defense, my advisor referenced the term "slipstream" often. I had heard of slipstream before, but it wasn't something I had researched. So instead I talked about my stories moving back and forth between literary mainstream and science fiction. Sometimes I'd swing to one side, sometimes to the other. Overall, my stories were inching closer to some strange place in the middle. But the middle couldn't have a name, right? It wasn't really a place.
The middle turned out to not be a swamp of sadness. In fact, it's the place where most of my favorite authors hang out.
This is a kind of writing which simply makes you feel very strange; the way that living in the late twentieth century makes you feel, if you are a person of a certain sensibility. ~ Bruce Sterling
Having a term I can use to describe my writing gives me guideposts. I don't always have to stay on this path. Maybe ten years from now I'll laugh at the idea that I once identified with slipstream. But for now, it is a way to navigate. It's a name to fight against that terrible feeling of the Nothing closing in from all sides.
After searching for a long time, all it took was a great writing friend to help me find a name.
And, of course, a little luck.
Monday, December 19, 2011
Looking Back on a Year of Writing
| The VerisimiliToad eager to start writing on the first day of Clarion West 2011. |
As for publications and acceptances, I had one short story accepted at a small literary journal. I'm very excited, because this short story is one I worked very hard to complete. My mentor, Gerri Brightwell, guided me through the revision process, continually asking questions that made me dig deeper into my character and his motivations. I've written many pages in my life, but I consider "In Miniature" to be my first real short story, where the characters, the plot, and all of those other little pieces came together to make a whole. It will be published in 2012 in the River Oak Review.
My friends from Clarion West have had a great year, full of professional sales and prestigious awards. I'm continually learning from them, and also just having a wonderful time reading their stories.
Here's to a great year of learning, making friends, and writing! I know 2012 will be just as grand. :)
Corinne Duyvis
- "The Applause of Others." Fish. Dagan Books. 2012.
- "Eight." Strange Horizons. 14 November 2011.
- "Rule of Threes." Crossed Genres. 2011.
- Interviewed by QueryTracker.net: "An Interview with Corinne Duyvis: A QueryTracker Success Story."
S.L. Gilbow
- "Alarms." Lightspeed Magazine. 2012.
- "The Old Terrologist's Tale." The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. May/ June 2011.
Sarah Hirsch
- "A Dancer for Aonou." Kaleidotrope. 2012.
- "The Nightmare Eater." The Colored Lens. December 2011.
- "20+ Inches of Gorgeous Virgin Blonde Hair." Little Village. December 2011. Issue #109. [Non-fiction article about selling her hair to raise money for Clarion West.]
Jei D. Marcade
- Interviewed by Nisi Shawl about "The Anarchist's Wife", Jei's submission story to Clarion West, in "The Steampunk That Dare Not Speak Its Name." Tor.com. October 5, 2011.
Jenni Moody
- "In Miniature." River Oak Review. 2012.
Jack Nicholls
- Katherine Susannah Prichard Speculative Fiction Award, 2011.
Mark Pantoja
- "Houses." Lightspeed. Issue #18. November 2011.
- Will also appear in the anthology Robots: The Recent A.I. Eds. Rich Horton & Sean Wallace. Prime Books. 2012.
- Author Spotlight in Lightspeed
- Mark's blog post about his process for writing this story.
David Rees-Thomas
- Reads "Kavar the Rat" by Thomas Owens, Pseudopod, Episode #249
- Reads "Still Small Voice" by Ben Burgis, Podcastle, Episode #181
- "Fisheye." Fish. Dagan Books. 2012.
Jeremy Sim
- Octavia E. Butler Memorial Scholarship, 2011.
Anne Toole
- "The Red Bandit." The Digital Wall. 2012.
- Reprint of "Night in the Library". Originally published in Crossed Genres, February 2009. Issue #3.
- "Accidents Happen" and "The Voices" for Me2. 2011.
Nick Tramdack
- "The Smile", Three-Lobed Burning Eye, Issue #21.
- "In the Zone." Eschatology. August 17, 2011.
- "Tale from a Save Point." Schlock Magazine. June 11, 2011.
Sunday, October 16, 2011
Riding in Cars with Authors
Every Friday night at Clarion West there is a party. These parties take place at the homes of local supporters of the workshop - wonderful, kind people who welcome students and local writers alike into their homes.
At these parties we were encouraged not to clump together with our classmates. There were strict penalties for clumping. Sometimes grapes rained from the sky to break us up. But it can be hard to break out of the comforting group of classmates and wander off to talk to an author you've been reading since childhood, or an author you've only just heard of, whose talk to the class on craft issues was so insightful and helpful that you took ten pages of notes.
The parties took place away from the sorority house where we lived and workshopped during the week. In order to get to these parties, we would depend on either Sarah's bus-savvy, Alberto's wonderful kindness, or we would ride with volunteers.
Many of the volunteers that drove us to the Friday night parties were writers. Some were Clarion West alumni, who gave us cheerful advice on how to survive. Some were writers we'd read and heard of long before coming to Seattle. Some were both.
Around Week 4 or Week 5, Vylar Kaftan came up to visit Seattle, and volunteered to drive some of us to the Friday night party. I signed up to ride in her car, along with my classmate Alisa.
Riding in the car with Vylar, Alisa and I got to talk to her one on one about Clarion West, about writing, about being an author in general. It was fantastic. I would have been too terrified to approach her at a party, but on the way to the party we had a great conversation.
I'm thinking of this because I recently read two awesome articles by Vylar posted on the Science Fiction Writers of America (SFWA) Facebook feed. The most recent one is "Submission Statistics and Revision Habits."
This post is so immensely helpful to me right now. When you come out of a workshop like Clarion West, you have these first drafts of stories that need revision. But you might also have tons of ideas for new stories, and new ways of telling stories. I feel torn between wanting to revise my Clarion West stories and wanting to start new stories. My Clarion West stories feel the closest I've ever been to writing stories that I love, and I feel like they're just a few paces away from being stories that other people would like to read, too. But I'm afraid I'm getting mired in re-working these stories too much, because it keeps me from writing new stories using the tools I've learned.
Vylar makes a wonderful point in her post about revision:
L. Timmel Duchamp, our Week Five instructor, told us how important it is to the writer to submit your stories. To send them out so you can begin writing new ones.
It's good for you on a deeper level than being efficient and good for your writing. It energizes you and makes you feel like you are part of the writing world, even if the story doesn't sell.
So I'm setting a goal for myself to revise my stories and submit them, but to also start writing new stories. Very soon.
I've heard people say that most people who want to write don't publish not because they aren't talented, or have interesting stories to tell. It's because they give up. Somewhere on the road they decide to take a step off of the pavement and do something else.
For me, submitting my stories is like signing-up to ride with an author I'd like to talk to, but am timid to approach otherwise.
It's another step forward.
At these parties we were encouraged not to clump together with our classmates. There were strict penalties for clumping. Sometimes grapes rained from the sky to break us up. But it can be hard to break out of the comforting group of classmates and wander off to talk to an author you've been reading since childhood, or an author you've only just heard of, whose talk to the class on craft issues was so insightful and helpful that you took ten pages of notes.
The parties took place away from the sorority house where we lived and workshopped during the week. In order to get to these parties, we would depend on either Sarah's bus-savvy, Alberto's wonderful kindness, or we would ride with volunteers.
Many of the volunteers that drove us to the Friday night parties were writers. Some were Clarion West alumni, who gave us cheerful advice on how to survive. Some were writers we'd read and heard of long before coming to Seattle. Some were both.
Around Week 4 or Week 5, Vylar Kaftan came up to visit Seattle, and volunteered to drive some of us to the Friday night party. I signed up to ride in her car, along with my classmate Alisa.
Riding in the car with Vylar, Alisa and I got to talk to her one on one about Clarion West, about writing, about being an author in general. It was fantastic. I would have been too terrified to approach her at a party, but on the way to the party we had a great conversation.
I'm thinking of this because I recently read two awesome articles by Vylar posted on the Science Fiction Writers of America (SFWA) Facebook feed. The most recent one is "Submission Statistics and Revision Habits."
This post is so immensely helpful to me right now. When you come out of a workshop like Clarion West, you have these first drafts of stories that need revision. But you might also have tons of ideas for new stories, and new ways of telling stories. I feel torn between wanting to revise my Clarion West stories and wanting to start new stories. My Clarion West stories feel the closest I've ever been to writing stories that I love, and I feel like they're just a few paces away from being stories that other people would like to read, too. But I'm afraid I'm getting mired in re-working these stories too much, because it keeps me from writing new stories using the tools I've learned.
Vylar makes a wonderful point in her post about revision:
The amount of time it would take to bring an old story up to your current standards is usually better spent writing a new story.She goes on to point out that she is not advocating that writers avoid revising their work. But that once you start sending a story out for submission, that you keep it going until you either sell it or decide to trunk it.
L. Timmel Duchamp, our Week Five instructor, told us how important it is to the writer to submit your stories. To send them out so you can begin writing new ones.
It's good for you on a deeper level than being efficient and good for your writing. It energizes you and makes you feel like you are part of the writing world, even if the story doesn't sell.
So I'm setting a goal for myself to revise my stories and submit them, but to also start writing new stories. Very soon.
I've heard people say that most people who want to write don't publish not because they aren't talented, or have interesting stories to tell. It's because they give up. Somewhere on the road they decide to take a step off of the pavement and do something else.
For me, submitting my stories is like signing-up to ride with an author I'd like to talk to, but am timid to approach otherwise.
It's another step forward.
Sunday, October 2, 2011
After Clarion West: Evasion
In the years before going to Clarion West, I would find the blogs written by soon to be Clarionites, and would follow them with devotion. Most bloggers would begin talking about their excitement over being accepted to the workshop, then maybe a few posts from the workshop describing their conversations with famous authors, and finally one post after the workshop saying, "I'm home, I'll blog about Clarion later." {Christopher Reynaga who attended Clarion West in 2008, has an awesome description of this on his blog.} But that later usually doesn't come about, and I was always curious and frustrated by this drop off in blog updates about Clarion. I wanted to know everything about the workshop so I could prepare for going there someday, if I were lucky enough to attend.
Neile Graham described leaving Clarion West to us as "raw", and that's how I felt my last morning at the sorority house. Some people had already left. Others were packing. When my ride to the airport arrived, things happened so quickly. I went out to say hi to the volunteer who would take me to the airport, and suddenly my classmates were around me, bringing out my luggage and helping me load it into the trunk.
How do you leave Clarion West? You don't. You kind of get taken away from it.
If you're lucky you'll have someone like Cassie to help you keep it together with secret tricks about stiff upper lips, Jei and Alex there to hug you and say you'll see them again, Mark to come out of the house at the last minute and wrap you in a bear hug. And you might have Maria saying she'll write to you, and Jack saying he'll see you again. And just when you think you've seen everyone for the last time, there will be Cassie and Jei leaning out of an upstairs window, waving to you, making you laugh, and pushing you into tears after all when you thought you'd make it to the airport without crying.
So not writing about Clarion West after you've come back to your other life is a kind of shield, or maybe just a good guard against writing overly emotional blog posts (I have trespassed, alas, and must pay the price). Going back to life post-Clarion is hard. So hard. But it is worthwhile, because you carry your friendships, and your knowledge, and your new stories with you.
There is a poem by Rilke that wraps in and out of the feelings I have for my Clarion West classmates. The last Friday night party I spent time talking with Jeremy, about going back, and about how we were just beginning to really know each other. There's this immense feeling of loss, of almost having.
You the beloved~ from Uncollected Poems, by Rainer Maria Rilke
lost in advance, you the never-arrived,
I don't know what songs you like most.
No longer, when the future crests toward the present,
do I try to discern you. All the great
images in me - the landscape experienced far off,
cities and towers and bridges and un-
suspected turns in the path
and the forcefulness of those lands
once intertwined with gods:
all mount up in me to signify
you, who forever eludes.
Ah, you are the gardens!
With such hope I
watched them! An open window
in the country house -, and you almost
stepped out pensively to meet me. I found streets, -
you had just walked down them,
and sometimes in the merchants' shops the mirrors
were still reeling from you and gave back with a start
my too-sudden image. - Who knows if the same
bird did not ring through both of us
yesterday, alone, at evening?
At graduation we were given decoder rings that flash a blue light. I thought at first they were meant to guide us through our writing, to help us translate the mysteries and skills of craft into our own stories.
But the night I arrived home in Alabama after Clarion West, I discovered the real purpose of the decoder ring. I twisted the silver metal until the blue light flashed, hoping it would somehow take us all back to Seattle, back to the workshop and to each other. I stood in front of the mirror in my clothes that smelled of stale airlines, my pigtails I had brushed into place in the bathroom of the sorority house, and hoped that somehow the stories we had been writing would bend reality, and make this strange thing come true. But there was, of course, Of Course, only the blue blinking light.
So real life went on. I took a shower, I changed into clothes different from the ones I had worn the last six weeks. I plugged in my computer and sat at my old desk.
And there they were. Some traveling, some still in Seattle, some already home. All hearing echoes of each others' voices, seeing friendly faces in strangers'. Spread out across the hemispheres, but still and always together.
Sunday, April 24, 2011
Clarion West 2011: Raising the Funds
Time slows down between applying to Clarion West and getting your notice of acceptance or rejection. But if you are accepted, then time accelerates. Into Warp.
We were allowed to share news of our acceptance on April 2nd, so I made the mistake of postponing fundraising until April. Then my day job became really busy, and now it is almost the end of April, and I'm just getting started finding ways to raise the funds for tuition, airfare, and living expenses while at Clarion West.
I can already tell that this is going to be a great class, full of innovative people, just from the ways that we take this first step towards Clarion West:
- Here's a kickstarter project by one of my classmates.
- And another of my classmates is making an amazing, beautiful statement of just how much this workshop means to her.
But today I had some fun. I went out into my backyard and made a video for my kickstarter project. You can watch it here.
I have no idea if this will work at all, but it seems like a good first step.

Sunday, April 17, 2011
Clarion West 2011: Getting the Phone Call
I got the call in the middle of March, the day after the earthquake and tsunami in Japan. I was on the phone with my father, a retired Nuclear Plant Trainer, and he was explaining to me the likely scenario at Fukushima. I lived in a little town near Hiroshima for a year as an undergraduate, and still have friends scattered around the country. My partner has aunts and uncles and cousins in Tokyo. I've been dreaming of going back for years. So when my phone started beeping, letting me know there was a call on the other line from a number I wasn't familiar with, I let it go to voice mail. I reasoned it was probably a call from work or a wrong number. I joked to myself, "Ha. Maybe that was Clarion West."
It was.
I had a voice mail waiting for me from Neile Graham, who has a lovely, friendly voice. I called back, calming myself, listing all the possible reasons I might have been called that were NOT about acceptance.
My application was incomplete.
I hadn't sent in the application fee.
I was an alternate.
They were calling to ask me to please never apply to Clarion West again.
But Neile told me I had been invited to attend. After squealing and jumping around and running into the kitchen and telling my partner, "It's Clarion West!" I finally calmed down enough to tell Neile, "Yes! I will be there."
I love that Clarion West calls the new class to let them know they've been accepted. It's that first jolt of connection, of waking up your mind to "hey! this is really happening!" But even after speaking with Neile, I couldn't accept that I'd actually be attending the workshop. I began to think it might be reality when I received a confirmation email later that night, but then I had to wait all through March to find out who my classmates were. I began to think that the release of the class list had been delayed because they had decided they didn't want me to attend after all, and were trying to figure out a way to tell me.
Now that it's April, and we've got an email list set up where we're talking about Clarion West preparations, it is beginning to feel real at last.
I've sent in my deposit to secure my place at the workshop. I'm waiting for Monday to roll around so I can buy my ticket to the Locus Awards. And there's a packet of information coming in the mail soon.
But I don't think I'll believe it until I arrive in Seattle and enter the mysterious sorority house, and sit down to workshop the kind of stories I love with people who love them too.
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