Denis Ledoux's Blog, page 62

November 23, 2016

November 23 Activity: Listening to Your Memoir Yields Dividends

November 23 Activity: Listening to your memoir yields dividends

As writers, we have often experienced of writing what we feel has to be deathless prose. Later, perhaps a week or a month later, when we pick up our own manuscript again, we realize that our deathless prose is perhaps closer to deadly prose.

Having your story read out loud is a revealing experience. Whether it is someone else who is reading or you yourself, it seems that you become a much more objective audience for your story...

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Published on November 23, 2016 02:03

November 21, 2016

November 21 Activity: Learn to Use Visualization In Your Memoir

November 21 Activity: Learn to use visualization in your memoir.

The memory list remains a powerful tool for memoir writing. Given the time to compile an extensive memory list, many of us can come up with many of the details of our lives. But, as good as the memory list is in propelling us through our past, it can come to a halt. What to do?

Use visualization in your memoir recall.

You can use visualization in your memoir to remember details that may be eluding you. Visualization (See Turni...

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Published on November 21, 2016 02:00

November 20, 2016

November 20 Activity: Practicing to Write In Quantity

November 20 Activity: Practicing to Write In Quantity

The goal of today’s activity is to practice the habit of writing easily and in flow. A first step a memoir writer usually takes is to write quantity, to write much. Quality will come later—as it must.

When a construction crew builds a house, it does the rough framing first. It is only later that the finish work gets incorporated into the structure. The same is true of memoir writing. The first thing you need to do is write in quantity, i...

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Published on November 20, 2016 02:00

October 31, 2016

Tips for Successful Memoir Writing

Tips for Successful Memoir Writing

Recently, someone asked me what are the biggest barriers memoir writers face to successful memoir writing. Three came to mind right away. Below, I write about them and offer suggestions for eliminating these barriers.

1. Writers often put off writing a good memoir in favor of struggling unsuccessfully to create a perfect one.

This is insidious because no one says they are putting off writing a good memoir in favor of a perfect one. Instead they say, “I w...

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Published on October 31, 2016 04:00

October 28, 2016

The Spirit of Villarosa

Libby Atwater is a memoir writer and long supporter of The Memoir Network. It is our pleasure to share her excellent work with you.

The Spirit of Villarosa: A Father’s Extraordinary Adventures; A Son’s Challenge

By Horace Dade Ashton and Marc Ashton with Libby J. Atwater

When Marc Ashton was kidnapped at gunpoint in Haiti, he fought to survive. Accosted by four armed thugs, Marc realized how life changes in moments. He made two promises: he would escape his captors, and he would tell his fa...

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Published on October 28, 2016 09:01

October 26, 2016

How to Write a Successful Memoir: It Can Happen to Any Family

Today’s writer is Cindy Doucettewhose book is It Can Happen to Any Family. Onyou on August 22, 2012, weprinteda testimonialwritten by a young person who was in the correctional system and who wroteofthe influence Cindy Doucette’s book had on her.

Our last interview was with author Peggy Kennedy. If you haven’t read it, click here.

Denis Ledoux: Can you tell our readers what your book is about and why you were impelled to write it? What was driving you to spend the time, energy and money to...

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Published on October 26, 2016 10:00

October 24, 2016

Shaping Your Theme

Shaping Your Theme The theme is the message—the why—of your writing.

You imbue the whole of your story with your theme and it, in turn, influences the choice of every element in your story—even when you’re not aware of it. In fact, all writing carries a message from the writer, an index of the motivation of the artist. Theme can be as broad as “There are good guys and bad guys, and you can tell them apart” and as subtle as “I want to tell others what it was like to live at a certain time o...

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Published on October 24, 2016 03:59

October 17, 2016

How to Begin a Memoir

Many writers agonize about just where to start alife story, where to begin a memoir. There are, of course, many places where a story can be launched.

1. The place in the story at which you begin to write is almost never the place at which readers will begin to read your story.

A writer begins someplace because beginning someplace is the way it is done. It is only much later that the writer will know where to place this initial piece of writing— at the beginning or elsewhere in the memoir.

...
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Published on October 17, 2016 04:03

October 13, 2016

Your writing is your work.

Your writing is your work: treat it as such!

A couple weeks ago, I ran a blog interview with Peggy Kennedy whose memoir, Approaching Neverlanddepicts her early childhood the memoir of ‘s early life in a family where the mother was mentally ill.

The next interview (October 28, 2016) will be with Cindy Doucette whose book, It Can Happen To Any Family, chronicles her daughter’s drug addiction and subsequent death from overdose. It is a tragic story, and in this interview which is as honest as...

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Published on October 13, 2016 12:15

October 10, 2016

Holding Back the Truth in Your Memoir

Holding Back the Truth in Your Memoir

Your memoir needs to tell the truth about life—yours—and sometimes that requires exposing yourself getting “naked.”

I believe one has to stop holding back for fear of alienating some imaginary reader or real relative or friend and come out with personal truth. If we are to understand the human condition and if we are to accept ourselves in all the complexity, self-doubt…. we have to know all we can about each other and we have to be willing to go naked....

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Published on October 10, 2016 03:56