A. LaFaye's Blog: Word Wanderings Rest Stop - Posts Tagged "fantasy"

Read Widely, Read Deeply, Read Writerly

Reading is an essential part of writing. It always floors me when a writing student says, I really want to write, but I don't like to read. That's aspiring to be a doctor and having a phobia of blood. Reading informs our writing so thoroughly; it's quite tough to do one without the other.

Here are a few things I've learned about reading...it's essential to read as widely as possible, read as deeply as you can, and to teach yourself how to read as a writer.

Many people who write in a given genre only read within that genre or a few books in a broader category. Young Adult fantasy writers tend to ready in that genre, adult fantasy, and a little outside the fantasy genre. On the other hand, you learn so much about world building from historical fiction. Your line by line style will sing when you discover the secrets of poetry. And picture book fantasies are often a tour de force of the imagination. Reading cross-culturally is also a great way for writers to gain insight into writing about/inventing (in speculative fiction) cultures. Reading non-fiction for readers of all ages is also a great way to expand your knowledge. You may not be able to change a windshield wiper, but you might want to create a convincing auto mechanic one day, so read up on car repair or listen to Click and Clack reruns on NPR.

After all, reading doesn't have to be only in print. You can read the news online, in print, on the TV, or on the radio. You can also read films, TV shows, webcasts, and podcasts.

When you do, think about what it says about the topic it portrays. What can you learn about it? What questions does it raise? Where can you find the answers? The more reading inspires you, the more you can inspire your readers.

Speaking of inspiration, it's also helpful to learn to read as a writer, not just to enjoy the text, but to take it apart, see how it ticks and try your hand at the same tricks of the trade. Reading as a writer teaches you how to critique the work of established writers and learns a few new ways to approach elements of craft. It also makes you an excellent critic in a workshop or even in your own office while you’re revising your work.

So read widely, read deeply, and read like a writer. With the new found knowledge and inspiration that brings, you never know what you might right next.
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Published on July 13, 2015 10:27 Tags: fantasy, fiction, historical-fiction, picture-books, poetry, reading, writing

Wandering and Seizing

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As the name of this blog reflects, I'm a bit of a wanderer, and this month, I wandered over to Molly Blaisdell's blog Seize the Day and offered a few ideas about blending realism and fantasy and frosting cakes (which I know surprisingly little about. Come check it out:
Bloom (in Frosting): Mixing Magic and Realism, Guest Blogger - Alexandria LaFaye!
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Published on May 10, 2016 06:43 Tags: blog, cake-decorating, creative-writing, fantasy, realism

"Book Addiction": The Reads That Shaped This Writer by Guest Blogger Laurie J. Edwards

Little Laurie Reading

A Reader Gets Hooked

Asking me to choose the book that had the greatest impact on me is liking asking me to choose my favorite child – it can’t be done. My mother’s favorite story is that, when I was eight months old, I would sit in my playpen and “read” Reader’s Digest from cover to cover, turning one page at a time and looking over one side and then the other, before turning to the next page. I may have been imitating my parents, who were voracious readers, but my love affair with books began then and continued throughout my life.

When I truly learned to read, I holed up in my room, ignoring my mother’s plea that I needed fresh air and exercise. My reading addiction led to flashlights under the covers and books hidden inside my school desk. I read an average of 20 to 30 books a week throughout my elementary, teen, and young adult years. I read my way through library after library, and my greatest joy was becoming a librarian with access to free ILLs (interlibrary loans) and no fines.



A Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett All of this makes it difficult to pinpoint one special book that turned me into a writer. The book I reread from cover to cover until it was tattered was A Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett. That book influenced my philosophy of life: I wanted to be Sara Crewe, to always be cheerful in spite of life’s hardships, to always look for the best in people, and to use my imagination to brighten any situation. If I had to give one book credit for inspiring my outlook on life and stirring my creativity, A Little Princess would win the award.


From Reading to Writing


A Wrinkle in Time (Time Quintet, #1) by Madeleine L'Engle

The author that I most wanted to imitate, though, was Madeleine L’Engle. When I read A Wrinkle in Time, I dreamed of writing a book that affected readers so powerfully, that immersed them so deeply in a fantasy that they lost track of time and space, and that made them sigh in contentment when they closed the cover, knowing that the ending was not only inevitable, but perfect.

When I began writing, I took Madeleine L’Engle’s quote to heart: “You have to write the book that wants to be written. And if the book will be too difficult for grown-ups, then you write it for children.” I strongly believe children have an open-mindedness and a deep, innate understanding of what’s important in life, a knowledge that adults lose as they rush through their days worrying about to-do lists and other people’s opinions. Young readers are storing up knowledge and information they’ll use as adults, so children’s books have the power to influence their life choices.

I still remember the impact Madeleine L’Engle’s quote of Francis Thompson made on my young impressionable mind: “Thou canst not stir a flower / Without troubling a star.” Reading those words made me appreciate the vastness of the universe and the interconnectedness of all life. I realized the ripple effect even tiny acts of kindness can have on the world around me, and to this day, I can’t pull weeds without feeling a vast sadness. I’d rather have an overgrown garden than remove a plant, any plant – even a weed. To touch readers’ lives so deeply that my words positively influence decisions made decades later would be my greatest dream.

I may never approach Madeleine L’Engle’s greatness, but when a teen boy comments on Wattpad about my YA novel Grace and the Guiltless, “I've never been so moved by a book. You honestly made me cry…” or a young teen girl says, “Reading this makes me stick up for myself and teaches me to boost my confidence,” I feel I’m heading in the right direction. Someday I hope to influence readers the way Frances Hodgson Burnett and Madeleine L’Engle affected me. These writers have taught me many things, but the most important is:
"Thou canst not stir a reader
Without troubling a heart.”*



*an adaptation of poetic lines by Frances Thompson "The Mistress of Vision"





A Little More About This Book Loving Author



Laurie J. Edwards is the author of more than 2200 articles and 30 books in print or forthcoming. A student in the Hollins University MFA program in Children’s Writing and Illustrating, she also juggles editing and illustration careers, while writing fiction and nonfiction for children and adults under several pen names. As Erin Johnson, she writes the YA Western series, WANTED, in which her heroine, Grace, has been called “the Katniss of the West.” As Rachel J. Good, she writes the SISTERS & FRIENDS Amish series. Visit her at
www.lauriejedwards.com tand www.racheljgood.com

Thank you so much for this lovely homage to the books that shaped you, Laurie.

Readers,

What books shaped your life?
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Published on May 26, 2016 12:04 Tags: author, fantasy, frances-hodgeson-burnett, laurie-j-edwards, rachel-j-good, reading, writing

Word Wanderings Rest Stop

A. LaFaye
A few words on writing and wandering and where the two weave together.
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