R. Garcia Vazquez

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R. Garcia Vazquez

Goodreads Author


Born
in Newark, NJ, The United States
Website

Twitter

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Influences
Saunders, Bradbury, Philip K. Dick, García Márquez, Kafka, Toni Morris ...more

Member Since
August 2017

URL


R. Garcia Vazquez writes literary and speculative fiction that wrestles with questions about what it means to be human in an increasingly complicated and divided world. His writing incorporates psychological, spiritual, and surreal elements, and has been described by professional and lay reviewers as beautiful, masterful, original, intelligent, unpredictable, haunting, funny, satirical, delicious hipster, emotionally insightful and riveting.

R. (i.e., Ramon) was born and raised in Newark, New Jersey, USA, the son of Spanish immigrants who taught him how to be human. He now lives in Ocean County, NJ with his wife, Ana

Author Website: rgarciavazquez.com

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R. Garcia Vazquez

I'm thinking of two types of writer's block. One is simply having the desire or need to write with nothing to write about; all you can do is stare at

…more

I'm thinking of two types of writer's block. One is simply having the desire or need to write with nothing to write about; all you can do is stare at a blank page (or screen). The second type is getting stuck in the middle of the writing process, like running a long distance and suddenly falling down. I find the former the easier of the two to manage.

If you understand that writing is really all about rewriting, you should have no hesitation in putting down on the page any word or phrase that pops into your head. The physical act of writing offers a gateway through writer's block. Write anything. Just keep typing or scripting anything that occurs to you, whether it makes sense or not. Look at where you are, pick an object (your coffee cup, a desk lamp), name it, give it life, make it move, give it a history, let it tell you its story. Give your brain a stimulus, a reason to unleash your imagination. The act of writing, even if all you're putting down is gibberish, will eventually--and it won't take long--filter out the nonsense and begin to produce meaning.

When I used to teach writing at a community college, I always encouraged my students to write without fear. Get something down, anything, and keep doing that until you produce something that can begin to be understood by someone else. Then go back and rewrite. The worst thing a writer can do when he or she experiences writer's block is to sit and stare at a blank page.

The second type of writer's block, getting stuck in the middle of the writing, for me, is the far more challenging type. Even so, I have attacked it in much the same way as the first. If I'm stuck, I begin to free associate, write whatever occurs to me about any of my characters and their circumstances. I may check old notes, things that occurred to me maybe even months earlier. If I come up with something I like, then I have to see if I can make it work within the context of the overall story. Sometimes that leads to interesting new twists. And even if I don't use that bit of writing, more often than not, it leads me to other possibilities. On occasion I have taken some elusive element that I liked too much to dismiss and locked myself in a quiet room or car for an hour or two just trying to visualize how this can work within the larger context of the novel.

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R. Garcia Vazquez The world is a crazy and dangerous place, but also a place of immense love and beauty. It's often difficult to remember the latter when we are forever…moreThe world is a crazy and dangerous place, but also a place of immense love and beauty. It's often difficult to remember the latter when we are forever surrounded by the sights and sounds of inhumanity and indifference. As a writer I get to wade through the horrors in search of those enduring proofs of love and beauty and survive to tell about them. I present these proofs to the reader in what I hope is a fresh and evocative way that he or she can connect with. Some of my most intense moments in life have come in the midst of writing, while dwelling in the world of the characters I have created.(less)
Average rating: 3.72 · 46 ratings · 20 reviews · 7 distinct worksSimilar authors
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My Gutsy Great Novelist Interview

A big thank you to Joan Dempsey and her assistant, Aja Rutledge, for featuring me in the Gutsy Great Novelist Writer Studio, “a private online space where serious creative writers gather to finish their novels.” Membership is nearly 1,800 writers as of August 2022, and growing. The following exchange with Aja first appeared on the GGNWS website and is presented ... Read More Read more of this blog post »
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Published on August 09, 2022 10:35
White Teeth
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R.’s Recent Updates

R. Vazquez liked a quote
Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra
“The fault lies not with the mob, who demands nonsense, but with those who do not know how to produce anything else.”
Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra
" My condolences to Kaye's family and friends. Kaye was a gifted writer and a wonderful human being. She will be missed. ...more "
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Quotes by R. Garcia Vazquez  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“It wouldn’t end too quickly. The final hours passed among memories and prayers and shadows. When he called to us, we all thought we were dreaming. It wasn’t a word we could understand, if it was a word at all. It was more a gesture, a faint entreaty, a request issued from a dream. He barely moved, if he moved at all. He barely spoke, if he spoke at all, and yet the three of us rose to our feet in response to something we may have collectively imagined.”
R. Garcia Vazquez, Mr. Galaxy's Unfinished Dream

“As they approached she turned her head suddenly and looked at me as if I were the source of some new sound only she could hear. I thought perhaps I reminded her of someone, or that she sensed in me a shared consuming need neither of us could fully articulate.”
R. Garcia Vazquez, Mr. Galaxy's Unfinished Dream

Topics Mentioning This Author

“A book must be the axe for the frozen sea within us.”
Franz Kafka

“Non est ad astra mollis e terris via" - "There is no easy way from the earth to the stars”
Seneca

“When life itself seems lunatic, who knows where madness lies? Perhaps to be too practical is madness. To surrender dreams — this may be madness. Too much sanity may be madness — and maddest of all: to see life as it is, and not as it should be!”
Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, Don Quixote

“All human nature vigorously resists grace because grace changes us and the change is painful.”
Flannery O'Connor, The Habit of Being: Letters of Flannery O'Connor

“The fault lies not with the mob, who demands nonsense, but with those who do not know how to produce anything else.”
Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, Don Quixote

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