Iris Lavell's Blog, page 7
December 3, 2013
Natasha Lester to speak at last meeting of the Book Length Project Group for the year, December 15.
Our last meeting for 2013 will take place on December 15. It promises to be a great day. We will be bringing food to share, exchanging 'secret Santa' books and sharing congenial conversation.
As a very special treat Natasha Lester will be present to discuss her work and some writing tips with us.
Award Winning Author Natasha LesterNatasha Lester is the award winning author of two novels, What is Left Over, After and If I Should Lose You. She has been described by The Age newspaper as “a remarkable Australian talent” and was awarded an Emerging Writers' Fellowship by the Australia Council for her second book, as well as a Publisher Fellowship at Varuna, The Writers House. She is also a recipient of the TAG Hungerford Award for Fiction.
In between writing novels and looking after her three children, Natasha blogs at http://whilethekidsaresleeping.wordpress.com and writes poems, short stories and essays, which have appeared in journals such as Overland and Wet Ink. She is currently working on her third novel.
As a very special treat Natasha Lester will be present to discuss her work and some writing tips with us.
In between writing novels and looking after her three children, Natasha blogs at http://whilethekidsaresleeping.wordpress.com and writes poems, short stories and essays, which have appeared in journals such as Overland and Wet Ink. She is currently working on her third novel.
Published on December 03, 2013 21:26
December 2, 2013
Lucas North

Published on December 02, 2013 15:28
Writing tip 1... understand what it is that motivates you
I'll be putting a tip up with an explanation on this day each week. The first is about writing motivation and clarity of purpose.
Try to clarify your reasons for writing and what it is that you want to achieve This is my suggestion - spend some minutes jotting down what it is that has brought you to this endeavour, and what you want to get out of it. Discuss it with interested others in a relaxed, social situation. I hope this will help you to become clear in your own mind about how to stay on track with your long-term writing project.
I hope this is a useful tip. It's about knowing your heart and mind and staying true to your vision. Your vision can change, but if it does, check back with yourself to ensure that it is a vision that continues to motivate you.
I think many writers, myself included, write for reasons that are not all that hard-headed, and not altogether within consciousness. If I write simply for the love of it, that's ok. Okay.
Personally, I'm still not entirely sure why I continue to write things down, but I know part of the story - the values that are important to me. Sometimes external factors (the changing scene of publishing; other peoples' perceptions; others', or our own, expectations of how long something should take, or other expectations) can send us off-track, and this can be demoralising. Negative feedback on your work-in-progress can do this, especially if it cuts across your unique artistic vision.
If in doubt, return to your vision. With regard to feedback, be open to advice, evaluate it, and use what is useful to you - when people provide feedback on your work they are almost always trying to help, and often they do, but in the end the work belongs to the writer, and the writer has the final call on the direction it should go. Whether this direction is likely to be commercially viable might (or might not) be a different question.
My feeling is that you will know if you are being true to your vision if you are continuing to enjoy the process.
Now for the writing prompt. Prompts are about exercising the writing muscle - bringing in an external impetus to get you started. Try this one, if you like: Writing prompt:Write (stream-of-consciousness - don't edit) about an incident or event shared with a childhood friend, or an incident that occurred with a childhood rival

Try to clarify your reasons for writing and what it is that you want to achieve This is my suggestion - spend some minutes jotting down what it is that has brought you to this endeavour, and what you want to get out of it. Discuss it with interested others in a relaxed, social situation. I hope this will help you to become clear in your own mind about how to stay on track with your long-term writing project.
I hope this is a useful tip. It's about knowing your heart and mind and staying true to your vision. Your vision can change, but if it does, check back with yourself to ensure that it is a vision that continues to motivate you.
I think many writers, myself included, write for reasons that are not all that hard-headed, and not altogether within consciousness. If I write simply for the love of it, that's ok. Okay.
Personally, I'm still not entirely sure why I continue to write things down, but I know part of the story - the values that are important to me. Sometimes external factors (the changing scene of publishing; other peoples' perceptions; others', or our own, expectations of how long something should take, or other expectations) can send us off-track, and this can be demoralising. Negative feedback on your work-in-progress can do this, especially if it cuts across your unique artistic vision.
If in doubt, return to your vision. With regard to feedback, be open to advice, evaluate it, and use what is useful to you - when people provide feedback on your work they are almost always trying to help, and often they do, but in the end the work belongs to the writer, and the writer has the final call on the direction it should go. Whether this direction is likely to be commercially viable might (or might not) be a different question.
My feeling is that you will know if you are being true to your vision if you are continuing to enjoy the process.

Now for the writing prompt. Prompts are about exercising the writing muscle - bringing in an external impetus to get you started. Try this one, if you like: Writing prompt:Write (stream-of-consciousness - don't edit) about an incident or event shared with a childhood friend, or an incident that occurred with a childhood rival
Published on December 02, 2013 01:15
November 30, 2013
Writing tips...

I guess we could all come up with a list of writing tips, and I'm not trying to teach my grandmother how to suck eggs (although I suspect my own grandmothers never did such a thing) but in coming up with these I was trying to clarify what it is that works for me, or what it is that I think might work.
So I thought I would do this thing - for the next however long I will put up a writing tip a week, scheduled to come up on the same day. Along with this will be a writing prompt - something to push against to do a bit of writing. The prompt might be a picture, an idea, a quote - I'm not sure yet, but it will be something you might choose to use, or lose.
I get the feeling that this blog is read mainly by other writers, or people interested in the process of writing, along with the Book Length Project Group network, so I'm hoping it will be of interest and of some use.
The first one will go up in the coming week.
Published on November 30, 2013 18:56
November 27, 2013
Writers' retreat - New Norcia

Here's Pat's report and a couple of photos from the retreat...
New Norcia

Published on November 27, 2013 16:24
November 22, 2013
My take on Margaret Atwood's "In Other Worlds - SF and the Human Imagination"

Anyway, the old and the new are now in authorial alphabetical order under six categories - Novels, Non-fiction stuff about ideas, Plays, Poetry, Short Story Anthologies, and Memoir. A seventh category, Miscellaneous, is miscellaneous.

I mention this along with Margaret Atwood's book because I have been taking breaks in my categorising and cataloguing to read it, and in a funny kind of way, it has probably influenced how I have interpreted it.
I found the reading satisfying in the same way that I now look at my neat bookshelves and find them satisfying. Some interior designers talk about autobiographical décor, and it's good to know that our eclectic taste in household stuff now has a name to legitimise it. If the furniture is autobiographical, I'd say the books we read and keep are even more so.
In Other Worlds might similarly be seen as an autobiographical account of Margaret Atwood's relationship with Science Fiction from the time she was a child to (loosely) current times (the book was published in 2011). I found it to be enjoyably fragmentary. This fragmentary but lightly themed approach is satisfying in the same way as it is to rummage through a box of dress-ups. You can go through the box systematically, or pick and choose, or take a lucky dip in to see what you come up with. For me, given that I was in my sorting out and cataloguing mode, I enjoyed reading it systematically from front to back, and I suppose the various essays, literary critiques, observations, talks and self-disclosures about this whole sci-fi field has been edited or arranged in that particular order to provide a sense of chronology.
There are observations regarding a fairly wide range of speculative novels that have entered the author's orbit over the years - H. Rider Haggard, George Orwell, Aldous Huxley, Yevgeny Zamyatin, HG Wells, Winthrop, Ursula le Guin, Sherri Tepper , Kazuo Ishiguro, Bryher, and others. Some I had just handled and lingered over in my concurrent reorganising activity. Others, like that of Kazoo Ishiguro - Never Let Me Go is one I haven't yet read, but now will.
When Margaret Atwood came to the Perth Writers Festival earlier this year, she sat with China Mieville to debate the finer points of the field. I gather that sometimes people get very upset over apparently competing categories - I wonder if maybe it's a mapping thing, including, but not entirely to do with territoriality, status and an idea of scarcity. Incidentally, mapping is something else that is discussed in one of the essays in the book.
If you're still not sure what Margaret Atwood's thoughts are with regard to Sci Fi, I think this book goes a long way towards giving a more rounded understanding of her perspective on the debate. More importantly it gives a sense of her long-standing love and respect for the whole field, whether it be considered high, middle or low-brow.
Five stars from me!
Published on November 22, 2013 21:18
November 21, 2013
Other good blog sites provided by writers networked into this group...
louise-allan.com great book reviews and reflections on life
Contemplating lifeThe Incredible Rambling Elimy elimy.blogspot.com has great book reviews and reflections on writing
burinsmith.com for great reviews and writing reflections and bentown.wordpress.com for food
Little Blog of Phlegm, (actually to do with phlegm) and vego camper (to do with preparing vegetarian food whilst camping).

burinsmith.com for great reviews and writing reflections and bentown.wordpress.com for food
Little Blog of Phlegm, (actually to do with phlegm) and vego camper (to do with preparing vegetarian food whilst camping).
Published on November 21, 2013 02:45
November 19, 2013
Maureen Helen lanches new blog!

Maureen Helen has previously given presentations to the Book Length Project Group.
Published on November 19, 2013 20:35
November 18, 2013
Distraction and reading
In his much lauded book of 1982
Camera Lucida
Roland Barthes wrote about a concept called punctum. This related to the art of photography, and it meant the thing in a photo that caught your eye, that the viewer kept returning to think about, even after the photograph has been removed. This was contrasted against the idea of studium, the boring bits, or boring photographs, if you like. The bread and butter that backgrounded the honey.
Punctum provides a little reward each time, I think, and because of this we tend to seek more. I mention this because the idea of it has influenced the way I think about the changes that are taking place in our collective way of being in the world, and particularly what I think might be our increasing distractability. While this might be seen as linked to the ability to multi-task (as a positive thing) I wonder if there is also something in this increasing skill of dividing attention (that is quickly flicking between one thing and another) that reduces our ability to concentrate on one thing, and to follow through with it. I think we are seeking punctum at the expense of studium - in other words we want the icing without the cake, and with much the same result.
What does this have to do with reading? Well, in some ways, it means we are reading more - which is a good thing, although the more we are reading might be a kind of flit, flit, flit as we go from one thing to another like dragonflies over a pond. (Yes, I also read somewhere about the tyranny of we, and when I say we, really what I am saying is me.)
What I had started to find was that my concentration and patience to tolerate studium was reducing, and my seeking out of punctum increasing, which might be all very well, but it meant that I was missing out on finishing some very good books that needed to settle in before they revealed their considerable gifts, often deeper and more valuable than those of the easier to read 'hold your attention' 'gripping' books (not always, but sometimes) and more soul-feeding.
So what did I do? I made a decision to settle my mind, to get out less, stay in more, reduce my screen time, increase my page and notebook time, to be mindful of the things around me, and to sleep and daydream enough to restore and repair. The whole thing has been restorative and anxiety-reducing. My concentration is improving. The novel I am writing, one that had been stuck for a little while, is starting to move again. And I am back to reading more books.
I might have the whole punctum/studium thing wrong, so I am going to pick up Barthes' book again and read it to see. It's been quite a while and I have changed in the interim. But I'm changing back.

Punctum provides a little reward each time, I think, and because of this we tend to seek more. I mention this because the idea of it has influenced the way I think about the changes that are taking place in our collective way of being in the world, and particularly what I think might be our increasing distractability. While this might be seen as linked to the ability to multi-task (as a positive thing) I wonder if there is also something in this increasing skill of dividing attention (that is quickly flicking between one thing and another) that reduces our ability to concentrate on one thing, and to follow through with it. I think we are seeking punctum at the expense of studium - in other words we want the icing without the cake, and with much the same result.
What does this have to do with reading? Well, in some ways, it means we are reading more - which is a good thing, although the more we are reading might be a kind of flit, flit, flit as we go from one thing to another like dragonflies over a pond. (Yes, I also read somewhere about the tyranny of we, and when I say we, really what I am saying is me.)
What I had started to find was that my concentration and patience to tolerate studium was reducing, and my seeking out of punctum increasing, which might be all very well, but it meant that I was missing out on finishing some very good books that needed to settle in before they revealed their considerable gifts, often deeper and more valuable than those of the easier to read 'hold your attention' 'gripping' books (not always, but sometimes) and more soul-feeding.
So what did I do? I made a decision to settle my mind, to get out less, stay in more, reduce my screen time, increase my page and notebook time, to be mindful of the things around me, and to sleep and daydream enough to restore and repair. The whole thing has been restorative and anxiety-reducing. My concentration is improving. The novel I am writing, one that had been stuck for a little while, is starting to move again. And I am back to reading more books.
I might have the whole punctum/studium thing wrong, so I am going to pick up Barthes' book again and read it to see. It's been quite a while and I have changed in the interim. But I'm changing back.
Published on November 18, 2013 17:04
November 13, 2013
Inspiration = a good book
Every now and again I need to remind myself what it is that I really value in books (as opposed to writing). Nothing tells me that more clearly than the books themselves. I love them for their own sake, for what they teach me, and because they inspire me to try to create something of value that will also give someone pleasure and inspiration. Granted, this will be yet another book in a burgeoning living reef of books. Still, within the limitations of my abilities, it will be the best I can write.
I suppose I tend to choose to read books either on the basis of their being of value to me at this particular time in my life, or more frequently it seems that the choice is serendipitous. So although it concerns me sometimes that I have so much admiration for the books that I have reviewed on this blog, because it might seem that the net is spread a little too wide, in fact I have so much admiration for these books because they are (in my opinion) very, very good and seem to have pulled off what must be to any writer who has tried to do likewise, an act verging on magic - the completion of stories (already something to be admired) that feel real, effortless in their execution, sophisticated in their expression, and emotionally intelligent and courageous in their exploration of character and circumstance. I find that lately I am falling in love (or at least falling in like) with each new book that I read.
I am currently in the middle of reading Joyce Carol Oates incredible (no, really incredible!) book published in 2012 - Mudwoman. (OMG!!!) If you are looking for a book that incorporates depth of character, political perspicacity, form as function, just plain writing skill at the elite athlete level, then this is a book to read and study. I certainly intend to do so. (For me) it is reminiscent of Susan Johnson's The Broken Book as it disorients the reader along with the disorientation of the protagonist, but in the same way that the poetry of e.e. cummings might do. You have to give in to it, swim with it, if you are to discover the wonders of the underwater world that it reveals. Whether we are to take this as the world of the collective unconscious, the dream world, the imagined life after life world, or more prosaically (possibly) the world of writerly metaphor, it's worth diving in.
Apologies for the purple prose, but I am in the purple prose mood this morning. Hope you find time to get hold of a copy of this remarkable book and read it. Would love to know what you think of it.
I suppose I tend to choose to read books either on the basis of their being of value to me at this particular time in my life, or more frequently it seems that the choice is serendipitous. So although it concerns me sometimes that I have so much admiration for the books that I have reviewed on this blog, because it might seem that the net is spread a little too wide, in fact I have so much admiration for these books because they are (in my opinion) very, very good and seem to have pulled off what must be to any writer who has tried to do likewise, an act verging on magic - the completion of stories (already something to be admired) that feel real, effortless in their execution, sophisticated in their expression, and emotionally intelligent and courageous in their exploration of character and circumstance. I find that lately I am falling in love (or at least falling in like) with each new book that I read.

I am currently in the middle of reading Joyce Carol Oates incredible (no, really incredible!) book published in 2012 - Mudwoman. (OMG!!!) If you are looking for a book that incorporates depth of character, political perspicacity, form as function, just plain writing skill at the elite athlete level, then this is a book to read and study. I certainly intend to do so. (For me) it is reminiscent of Susan Johnson's The Broken Book as it disorients the reader along with the disorientation of the protagonist, but in the same way that the poetry of e.e. cummings might do. You have to give in to it, swim with it, if you are to discover the wonders of the underwater world that it reveals. Whether we are to take this as the world of the collective unconscious, the dream world, the imagined life after life world, or more prosaically (possibly) the world of writerly metaphor, it's worth diving in.
Apologies for the purple prose, but I am in the purple prose mood this morning. Hope you find time to get hold of a copy of this remarkable book and read it. Would love to know what you think of it.
Published on November 13, 2013 21:28
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