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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: self-doubts, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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Blog: wordswimmer (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: first drafts, self-doubts, free-writing, critical eye, keep the pen moving, suspending judgment, Add a tag
Blog: wordswimmer (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: making mistakes, silence, self-doubts, belief in yourself, how to keep writing, questioning one's self-worth, Add a tag
I sent off another story yesterday. Now I’m wondering if I sent it to the right place. It’s how the self-doubt starts. In a few weeks, if I don’t receive a response, the question will shift in a subtle way. It will become something very different. It will turn into “Was it ready to send out?" And then “Did I need to do more work on it?” And all of a sudden, like a trap door dropping
Blog: wordswimmer (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: writing process, self-doubts, finding the right words, questions a writer asks, Add a tag
Excerpts from a recent journal entry: Up early -- 5:45 am. Still groggy from sleep. Yesterday I started typing the historical fiction novel that I've spent the past month writing by hand. Just typing, no edits. Re-reading the story. That's all. As I write this morning, I ask what's the purpose of this journal keeping? Is it a record of what I do? A kind of superficial summary of my life--did
Blog: Kate's Book Blog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: mitali perkins, historical fiction, sarah miller, eric luper, new york state reading association, anita silvey, susan goodman, elizabeth bunce, Add a tag
I spent Thursday and Friday at the NYS Reading Association Conference in Saratoga Springs. Here's a roundup of the highlights...
1. The Authors Progressive Banquet was fun and stress-free. I didn't even spill anything. I was a little concerned about how the logistics would work, because the authors start the evening at one table and then rotate, switching tables for each course. Turns out you got NEW silverware every time you moved and didn't have to take it with you. That worked out well, though I think I might have been drinking from another author's water glass at one point. It's hard to say...
2. I found out about four minutes ahead of time that all the authors would be giving a brief, two-minute talk to the ENTIRE group in the ballroom during that banquet, which caused me to panic momentarily, but not for long because there just wasn't that long to worry about it. I think I said something coherent.
3. I was on a quilt!
NYSRA had authors sign quilt squares and put them together into three gorgeous quilts for a raffle. Wasn't that a great idea?
4. I got to meet Eric Luper (eluper) and hear his presentation about his YA novel Big Slick and his journey from reluctant reader to novelist.
High school teachers, take note: Eric is smart and engaging and funny, and I predict that pretty soon he'll be booked solid for school visits because he's going to connect with teen boys in a big way. Plus, he has wicked-cool poker chip key chains as giveaways. What more could you want?
5. I spent some time chatting with Susan Goodman, who writes children's non-fiction and has a funny book about elections called See How They Run coming out this May. My students are going to love this one!
6. I met Mitali Perkins and got to tell her in person how much I liked Rickshaw Girl.
7. I heard Anita Silvey talk about current trends in children's publishing. She said fantasy and science fiction are still strong, historical fiction is on the rise, publishers are looking for "no-blush" MG and Tween books that families can enjoy together, and this is the age of the graphic novel. Shaun Tan's The Arrival is now on my must-read list.
8. I gave a presentation called "Historical Fiction as a Bridge to Content Area Literacy" and got to share bunches and bunches of my favorite HF titles. We talked about dozens of titles from different time periods -- some well known and some that flew under the radar. I shared excerpts from Spitfire, Sarah Miller's Miss Spitfire, and Elizabeth Bunce's A Curse Dark as Gold (March, 2008), which is a shining example of how historical fantasy can be used to introduce students to a time period (in this case, the Industrial Revolution).
9. Not exactly conference-related, but still a highlight... I had perhaps the best chocolate chip cookie of my life at Four Seasons Natural Foods in downtown Saratoga. It was really, really crunchy....a sweet ending to a fantastic two days of talk about reading, writing, and why we love stories so much.