Elizabeth Engstrom's Blog, page 12
October 22, 2010
My Keynote Presentation
This morning I was honored to deliver the keynote presentation at the Surrey International Writer's Conference. This is the text of that presentation:
Good morning. It is an honor and a privilege to stand before you this morning. The keynote, as I understand it, is the talk that sets the key note for the conference, and I am delighted to share with you what I hope will be the keynote of your experience here in Surrey.
There are two things I'd like to talk about this morning. The first is the responsibility of writers in our culture, in our history and in our future, and the second is our responsibility to our readers.
The first—responsibility to our culture—cannot be overestimated. Writers are the keepers of the literature, the chroniclers of our times. Think of the rich history Dickens has lent to those of us who have never experienced those times. He has shown us the attitudes, the vocabulary, the sights, smells, sounds of Victorian London. And he was but one writer. One voice.
Sometimes we think that we're sitting alone in our offices in front of our keyboards (Facebook minimized in the corner), making up silly little stories that don't really matter in the greater scheme of things. It is easy for us to let the committee in our minds get control of us and encourage us to 'get a real job' or 'do something worthwhile' – especially if one of the voices that comprises our committee happens to be The Mother. And it may be true that there isn't a Dickens in this room who will speak for an entire generation, but together, we do. Each voice is a part of the great chorus of this generation of writers that will speak for eons. And every chorus is comprised of what? Individual voices.
So put the committee down for a nap whenever you sit at the keyboard. You are providing an important service for our culture and for the future inhabitants of this planet as well as for your current readers.
And that brings me to my second point. Our responsibility to these readers.
When you sit down at the keyboard, you are in the process of creating a product that you hope to sell. You don't want to sell a useless gizmo to your friends and neighbors, loved ones and fans. You want them to feel good about their purchase, to spread the word. In order to do that, you have to give readers something they want and need.
Well. What the hell do readers want? I'll tell you. They want to read about conflict. They don't want to engage in it, they don't want to live it, in fact, we all go to great lengths to avoid conflict in our lives.
But when we go to bed at night, and turn on the reading light and pick up that book on the nightstand, we want to dive into outrageous, mind-blowing conflict, but only if the author is artful in putting us into the shoes of the characters. If we can make ourselves believe that we are embroiled in amazing conflicts, we continually say to ourselves, Could that really happen? I would NEVER do such a thing, or I would LOVE to do something like that, all the while knowing that it is never really going to happen. But what we're actually doing is learning about ourselves, because we don't have the opportunity to actually see ourselves in much conflict.
This is the entertainment value of fiction. We get to fantasize about situations we will never actually find ourselves in. The great value in that for a reader is that they close the book and come away from the experience with a greater understanding of themselves.
This is what you're selling. Readers' enhanced experience of themselves.
This is why you must pay so much attention to character, to setting, and to plot. This is why you must write with such realism that the reader can actually put themselves into the clothes of the characters, both good guys and bad guys. This is why you must pay particular attention to the emotional makeup of the character. This is why the bad guy must be so bad. A milquetoast bad guy results in a milquetoast story. Your story is only as strong as your antagonist. Give your characters real evil to battle. This is how all readers want to see themselves: not going to their mundane jobs as accountants, janitors and IT techs, but as night time heroes, battling evil and saving the world.
This is what you're selling. This is escapist literature. This is entertainment.
This is your responsibility. Your job is to dig so deeply into your own soul, your own longings, your own failings, your own insecurities and present them to the page so clearly that you change lives.
This is how you join the chorus.
And so if I am to strike the key note at this conference, it is this: The world needs your words. The world needs you to learn your craft so that you can join the chorus in tune and vie for that soloist spot. The world needs you to continue to experience without aid of self-medicating so that you don't keep using up your experience without replenishing the well. The world needs you to be ruthless in your self-examination. The world needs you to speak your truth, and speak it loudly, boldly, fearlessly.
And if you do that, you will change lives, not the least of which will be your own.
Thank you and have a wonderful conference.








October 19, 2010
Writing en masse
There is something to the idea that group synergy equals more than the sum of its parts.
Last weekend, twelve of us got together at a beautiful riverfront resort up the McKenzie River in Oregon to write science fiction stories. This weekend, like the annual ghost story weekends, required all participants to write a science fiction story in 24 hours. We had some good chats about science fiction, and then at 7pm on Friday, after dinner, we all got down to it.
Saturday at 7pm, the dinner dishes done, exhausted yet energized, we sat in a comfy circle to hear the stories. It's like having someone reading an entire anthology of excellent science fiction stories. We laughed, we shivered, we exclaimed, speculated, we clapped, we cheered. And then we realized that every one of the stories had certain elements in common. How could that be? There was no collaboration, no collusion. How could every single story have some of the same thematic elements? These were not things we discussed in pretrip meetings or over Friday night pizza and salad. They just happened.
I prefer to think that these things are in the ether. That our mind channels, when opened to the Great Creative Powers become not unlike an insecure internet portal. We wander around the grounds in the sunlight, pondering our stories, and those ponderings collide with another writer's musings, and bingo! They both come up with a common solution for their outrageously different stories.
We've had this type of synergy before in these weekends. I've facilitated enough of them now that I thought I'd seen everything, but no. This was extraordinary.
And made every one of us eager to repeat the process.
Next spring: Fantasy Story Weekend.








September 19, 2010
All About Stress
I read some interesting things about stress yesterday.
First, it shortens your life. Duh.
But the interesting thing this report said is that your body constantly lives in the now. If your mind lived in the now, there would be no stress, no conflict, no tension.
I've always thought that we control our own level of stress, but I've never considered it to be this simple an equation before. If my mind is too busy thinking about what just happened or what might happen, then I feel stress, as my body ...
September 9, 2010
My thesis is now available
My Master's thesis (Applied Theology), "Spiritual Sustainability: A Personal and Social Imperative" is now available for download on the Kindle.








August 26, 2010
A New Short Story
A new short story of mine (a vampire story, no less) appears in the new Apex anthology now available via Kindle.
If you don't have a Kindle (really?), it's available in other digital forms from Apex Books.








August 18, 2010
I'm Outraged
Matthew Fox (the theologian, not the actor) said that while there is a time for calm meditation, there is also a time for action and that in his opinion, we were quickly approaching a time for moral outrage.
That time came for me yesterday when I turned on CNN and watched a Christian preacher bully a Muslim Imam, decrying Allah and trying to convert him to Christianity. Despite the Imam's calm presence and suggestion that he only wanted to be good neighbors, The "Christian" was rude...
August 15, 2010
Summer Red Cabbage Delight
Potlucks are wonderful things. Especially so if you find a recipe that you cannot live without. This one, from my spinning friend Darlene, is so simple that it'll be a regular at our dinner table (and the pot lucks I attend) from here on out.
The best part? For the first time in years, I grew red cabbage in the garden, and I see that one is ready to harvest.
Darlene's Outrageous Red Cabbage
For every 2 cups of cut up cabbage (bite size, not shredded), put in a large frying pan: 1 Tbl oil, 2 Tbl ...
August 12, 2010
York's Moon
My new mystery novel, York's Moon, is on track for a February hardcover publication date.
Here's the back cover copy on the Advance Reading Copy:
When a dead guy falls off the train just yards from Yorktown, a hobo camp near West Wheaton, California, all manner of forces begin to collide.
Three men live in Yorktown: York, the old blind hobo and self-proclaimed mayor and minister of his little enclave, Denny, the young rail rider, and Sly, the damaged Vietnam vet. When they are blamed for the...
July 19, 2010
What is Justice?
With Social Justice being somewhat of a battle cry these days, I think it might be important to ask those who are working for social justice to please define it.
The word "social" is easy. The dictionary says: "of or pertaining to the life, welfare, and relations of human beings in a community."
The situation gets a bit thornier when we try to define Justice. Normal definitions have to do with moral codes and the law. Well, are the laws defined by our moral codes? Whose moral codes do we use...
July 12, 2010
Rightmindedness
I've been giving a lot of thought lately to that word: Rightmindedness.
We have a thousand opportunities every day to choose our mindset. If we get our minds right, we can choose happiness, joy, freedom, love, light, loyalty, sunshine.
Or, if something we don't like happens, we can allow it to color our whole day, our month, our year. A moment's temptation can throw us off a diet, for example, and in a few days, all the good hard work that's been done is erased. Or, we could choose to not let ...