Waiting To Start

Friday, April 5th, 2013 - Blog, Places for writers, Thinking, Tip

Starting a new piece of writing is always exciting except if, like me, you give up ninety percent of the things you begin. It used to just be part of my process, but now it’s kinda exhausting to realize that 20,000 words down the line an idea simply isn’t working. I tell myself that quitting and letting go is good for me, etc etc, and that it’s how I get the books finished that sometimes I do, but it’s still a bit depressing to throw myself into something only to abandon it halfway through.

Instead, with my next book, I’ve been writing it and abandoning it in my head. Over and over again. I can’t quite find the right place to start and I waiting until the story becomes clearer to me before I begin. I hope this doesn’t mean that I never finish a book ever again. I hope instead that it means I don’t have to give up and begin over with a new point of view, a new character, a new story, because I’ve been a little more patient in the planning of this novel. I’ve been reading about – shock and horror – outlining. Perhaps, perhaps, it’s time to give outlining a bit of a try…

Today, spend a little time outlining a possible story you want to write one day. Something new, something you like the idea of, something that’s been ticking over in your mind. Write out one way for the story to go, then leave it for a few days or weeks and see if the story will end up working for you. I’m going to try this too! Good luck.

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Pages and Patches

Wednesday, April 3rd, 2013 - Blog, Review

A great review here – thanks very much Devin Pacholik

My teenage years were characterized by simultaneously not knowing anything and yet believing I knew everything. I was angry at stuff. I thought communism was right, and I especially thought my parents were stupid, and get out of my room, mother, it’s none of your business.

My point is, teenagers are confusing balls of chaos. They have to deal with their first taste of adult-like problems, but they are still regarded as children.

Amy Finch, in Alice Kuipers’ 40 Things I Want to Tell You, is caught in that in-between place, of not quite adult and kid.

A gifted and mature high school student, Amy, or Bird as she is nicknamed, is focused on preparing herself for an Oxford education. She is diligent in her studies, committed to her long-term boyfriend Griffin, her childhood friend and next-door neighbour, and is generally labelled as the predictable one by her peers.

Her best friend, a good-looking privileged young lady named Cleo, is there to push Bird out of her ivory tower once and a while. Cleo, somewhat envious of Bird’s long-term relationship, is the not-so-good example when it comes to dating a slew of guys and ignoring responsibilities. Cleo has a good heart though.

Bird’s father is a dedicated, if not somewhat manic entrepreneur investor, whose business ideas are risky, to say the least. However, his relationship with Bird’s mom is strained from years of neglect and high stress. Bird, is too distracted to notice the subtleties of her parents’ marital problems. Likewise, boyfriend Griffin’s mother is going through a mental breakdown after losing her husband.

As the deathblow to Bird’s focus, enter Pete Loewen. Pete is new at school, and the rumours about him say that he’s a bad-boy, smokin’ hot heartbreaker.

Bird makes some impulsive decisions at this point, and all of the tensions around her explode.

I hesitate to give away too much because Kuipers’ narrative charms the reader along a maze-like path of Bird’s fruition into adulthood. It’s a captivating journey.

Birds’ choices and follies are deliciously awful, written with a dramatic flair that is delicately wrought. Kuipers delivers on the hard conversations about sex, love, abortion and mental illness. There is no masking or turning away during these dialogues: we are pulled into the rawness.

Bird is the best kind of protagonist. She is the victim of her own choices, and yet she is not a dummy. Impulsive, perhaps, but she has a brain, heart and an amiable narrative voice. She is lovably flawed.

One of Bird’s pet projects throughout the novel is her website, in which she writes under the penname, Miss Take-Control-of-Your-Life, dolling out advice, “From one teen to another.”

This online dynamic prompts an existential conversation about identity, truth and reconciliation. Bird gets caught up in her persona, who is perfect, while the real-life Bird falls of the edge of her life of predictability.

via Pages and Patches.

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Fridge Doors

Tuesday, April 2nd, 2013 - Blog, Thinking

Having written a book set on a refrigerator door, I’m always being sent images of people’s fridges. I love how clean and clear this fridge door is with magnetic frames for children’s art. I should show you how untidy my fridge is by comparison! Send me (on twitter) a photo of your fridge and show me what you put up on display in your family! I’ll post my favourites here ;-)refrigerator art frame tutorial 10

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