Ramblings from a writer's conference...

     Here is a rambling post about the William Patterson University Spring Writers Conference that I attended on Saturday, April 18.           Sometimes when I go to writing conferences I get wrapped up in taking notes, but this time I sat back and just absorbed myself in the day.

The keynote speaker, Porochista Khapour, author of The Last Illusion was inspiring, generous, and interesting. 
Here are some things I took away from the keynote speech…
- Social media while great, is an artificial pulse… Porchista advises us to slow down.  - Encourages you to get out of the house.  Talk to people. - Position yourself to be lucky…how do you do this? BY getting out of the house. By saying yes to things. - Give yourself permission not to write everyday. But live life everyday. Read everyday.
Then I attended Porochista workshop on writing endings. We read endings of a couple of books and talked about different endings and well, okay – maybe I should have taken notes…
Then we broke for lunch.
Porochista gravitated with a group of us outside of the classroom and we ended up lunching together with my fellow writer friend Marianne Sciucco, workshop teacher/poet Soroya Shalforoosh, and two other lovely ladies.
The topics of discussion ranged from women writers supporting each other, to books, to life. I really could've spoke with these women all day.
After lunch I attended Finding and Writing Your Inner Teenager with Robin Wasserman, author of several YA novels, including the The Seven Deadly Sins series.
I took this workshop because I’m planning to write a Young Adult story over the summer.
Robin handed out several pieces of writing about teenagers and we had to guess if it was from adult fiction or from a YA novel. It was a great exercise.I took these one-line notes…-       nail the details of teenage life-       flavor of way teenager talk-       teenager have a small life but big dreams-       it’s either a sunny day or doom and gloom-       every emotion is operatic-        teenagers weigh their choices differently than adults-       lots of decisions aren’t up to them-       try to emotionally connect to who we were as teens-       ask what is the relevancy of family/adults to the story and if relevant do not make adults cookie cutter.
-       YA is a lot about 'firsts' .. first date…first kiss, etc.

I feel better prepared to write this YA! Thanks Robin!

It was a great day. So glad I 'got out of the house'. I picked up a copy of The Last Illusion, which I can't wait to delve into. I couldn't help though to take a peek at the opening line...

Exactly ONCE UPON A time in a small village in Northern Iran, a child of the wrong color was born.


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Published on April 20, 2015 15:57
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