Showing posts with label C. Writing Concepts-b. Show all posts
Showing posts with label C. Writing Concepts-b. Show all posts

Sunday, July 10, 2011

A Visit to the Writer's Chapel

(Thought-Random)


        The writers start filing into the chapel, located in a dark cafe.  On the wall are the workshop commandments:

        DO NOT TAKE THY WRITING IN VAIN.

REMEMBER THE WORKSHOP DAY AND DO NOT BE TARDY OR ABSENT.

HONOR THY INFLUENCES.

THOU SHALT NOT PLAGIARIZE.

THOU SHALT NOT BEAR FALSE CRITICISM AGAINST THY WORKSHOP NEIGHBOR

THOU SHALT NOT COVET THY WORKSHOP NEIGHBORS OEUVRE, ALTHOUGH GUSHY APPRECIATION IS FINE.

        When the room is full, they sit down at Paris cafe tables, open their manuscript books, and simultaneously bellow an excerpt from a work-in-progress; a joyful noise fills the room.
        They turn to the Book of Common Prose and read:

                Oh muses forgive us for we know not what we write.
                We have only working drafts to show for our trials.
                We have sinned in our procrastination, laziness, im-
                precision of language, failure of courage and imagi-
                nation, and overall lack of will.  Please grant us the 
                language to make bad experiences into good stories.
                Bless us with images,the stubbornness to carry on,
                the fortitude to forego unjust criticism, and the gen-
                erosity of spirit to praise the work of others.


        They take communion of a sip of espresso and a symbolic drag on an unlit cigarette.  On their way out, some stop by the Confessional Poem booth, where they recite a self-indulgent, autobiographical screed without fear of derision.
      
                                                          ----------------------------------
     
From Alan Ziegler's The Writing Workshop

Saturday, April 2, 2011

Writing Rules

(Thought-Random)


the only          
12 ½   writing rules
                           you’ll ever need                

1.   If you write everyday,       you get better at
 writing every day.        2.   If it’s boring to you,
it’s boring to your reader.       3.   Get a writing
routine and stick with it.  4. Poetry does NOT
have to rhyme.       Poetry does  NOT   have to
rhyme.  5.  Resist stereotypes, in real life and
in your writing. 6. Writers read.  Writers read 
a lot.Writers read all the time  7.Make lists of
your   favorite words   and books    and places  
and things.8.There doesn’t always have to be
moral to a story. 9. Always bring your note-
book.  Always bring a spare pen.    10.  Go for
walks,   dance,   pull weeds.       Do the dishes.
Write about it.     11.   Don’t settle on just one
style.    Try something new.         12.  Learn to
tell both sides of the story.     12 ½. .      Stop
looking at this poster.     Write something!



Thanks, Frank Cimatu