The character is a film editor. It could as easily have been said of literature by a book editor. I do appreciate Fay Weldon!At night, lying next to me, he would sometimes sigh heavily in his sleep, and I would feel my heart almost break for him, but there is no healing the world's grief, of which he had no more than his share. I really cannot understand why we are born with such a capacity for it. But there is always cinema, to take us out of ourselves.
Writing stories is one of the ways I keep sane. World-building takes a lot of time and thought, but there is something quite magical in immersing oneself in an imaginary place, climate, scenery, culture, inventing people, dwellings, food crops... You get to be a deity of sorts. — Vera Mont
The most fun project I ever had was a collaborative medieval 'fairy tale', with kings and knights, a dragon and a witch. Had to learn about armour and castles. — Vera Mont
frantically paging back and forth, "Why can't I remember what those little shrubs are called?" I got so exasperated with that one, I had a character say it. — Vera Mont
Here is a little quote from a Fay Weldon novel, Rhode Island Blues that I'd like to share for no particular reason.
...The character is a film editor. It could as easily have been said of literature by a book editor. I do appreciate Fay Weldon! — Vera Mont
I think I know why. She's held up some mirrors we'd rather not look into. And she could be devastatingly funny. In my literary firmament, she's up there with Atwood, Lessing and Kingsolver.I didn't appreciate it at the time. I remember feeling disturbed but don't ask me why. — Amity
That's a topic I have never been inclined - or felt qualified - to approach. That's probably why I didn't understand that poem. I write a lot of male characters, and sometimes express their feelings and attitudes toward women, but I get the information from outside, as it were, from observing how people behave and listening to how they talk about one another. I don't deeply identify with gender.Same thing with the poem Sempre. It doesn't read like much but it made me question my own female/male aspects or qualities. Or should that be feminine/masculine? — Amity
Oh, she was a nasty piece of work! Not my creation, but I had a chance to tweak her, and all the other characters, a little bit. A Dark and Stormy Knight, written on a philosophy forum, now long defunct, by six different posters on three continents, who didn't even know one another's real names.Now that is something I'd like to hear more about! Witches are fascinating. — Amity
A Dark and Stormy Knight, written on a philosophy forum, now long defunct, by six different posters on three continents, who didn't even know one another's real names.
It started as a challenge: Here is an opening paragraph; write the next paragraph. The story emerged over several weeks and took some amusing turns... — Vera Mont
During the pandemic, I was invited to be a researcher on a project looking at stories of gender-based violence during the Covid-19 pandemic. We didn’t want to ask participants to do anything we weren’t prepared to do ourselves and so as part of the research, we wrote our own remembered stories of gender-based violence. These came out as fragments, which often happens with traumatic memory and is one of the reasons that poetry is so fitting in this work. — Mel Parks - Collaborative creative writing in the community
I personally believe that haiku is something individualistic, an expression of an amazement for perceiving the nature around us. — javi2541997
If I write a haiku about it, I have to expect that the other part would like autumn as much as I do. — javi2541997
This back-and-forth pattern fosters a symphony of ideas and emotions.
Shift and Link: Each stanza introduces a “shift” and a “link.” The shift changes the topic or tone from the previous stanza, while the link maintains continuity, creating an interconnected flow. — Amity
I ended up in the conclusion that renga is for real masters of haiku. I am not part of them. — javi2541997
There is another interesting feature: 'haikono'...
A person posts a picture of landscape or places and the rest write a haiku of that photo. This is very nice to do. — javi2541997
Re sanity: I felt mentally disturbed when writing Red, White and Blue. In that I felt my inner self was being exposed. I was immersed not only in the story but simultaneously discovering...perhaps hidden aspects...who the hell is this writing? It's not me! — Amity
Something a bit like that happened to me on the Gr. 13 English final. They gave us a dozen titles to choose from, one of which perfectly fit a story I was already writing in my head. By the time I finished, there were only a few minutes left for the other questions. I answered less than half of them, and was sure I'd get a lousy mark.
I got 96%. My teacher liked the story so much, she wasn't bothered about the grammar and structure questions. She even invited me to a summer course in creative writing. (Couldn't go; had to get a job. I'm still sorry I missed it.) — Vera Mont
Lesson Three
Basho as Renga Master
Until Bashô’s time, most renga had either 100, 1,000 or 10,000 links. Considering the time and effort it took Bashô to get to the government outpost for a renga party, and thinking of how uncomfortable he might have been living amongst strangers for an extended period of time, it is no wonder he devised a renga form using only thirty-six links called the kasen (KAY-SEN(d) – poetic sages) – supposedly to honor the 36 immortal poets of Japan. — Ahapoetry - Bare Bones School of Renga
But a lighthearted story form, or epic poem with no very strict rules of verse structure - I guess I mean an epic doggerel - might be fun, and plain old storytelling is even more accessible. That, I know people around here can do well! — Vera Mont
I hate being interrupted. But then, my stories are not personal or profound; they're just stories. — Vera Mont
AND...that of others...@Baden Jamal @fdrake et al.
The Literary Activity 2024. Is it happening? — Amity
But hey, it will probably be a last minute decision. Not holding my breath! — Amity
Oh, it's always that. I just meant that I don't get so emotionally invested in a story that I agonize over it. It's more an intellectual exercise for me.If it is not about your interests, hopes and dream worlds, then what is it? — Amity
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