"Journaling as a Discovery Tool for Current Projects" 🖊📕
Splendid news: I’m guest blogger today at CreateWriteNow!
My article, “Journaling as a Discovery Tool for Current Projects,” was published this morning.
Also check out journaling prompts, Mari’s marvelous book, Journaling Power, and other inspiring journaling resources at CreateWriteNow!
"3 Ways Receptivity Leads to Authentic Writing" 🙌📕
Great news! My article about authentic writing was featured today at Women on Writing. Read on!
“3 Ways Receptivity Leads to Authentic Writing”
By: Melanie Faith
We writers tend to be natural observers. Sometimes, that means noticing little nuances of behavior or movement that others might not pay attention to at all. Other times, that includes thinking about an overheard conversation or wondering about the tension within someone’s voice minutes, hours, or even days later.
This receptivity often leads to amazing results and renewed vitality in our writing. According to vocabulary.com, “Your receptivity is your ability and willingness to take in information or ideas.”
Why receptivity? Overall, we writers are meaning-seekers and meaning-interpreters. Not only do we have to choose (or be chosen by) our subject matter, but also we write and edit to bring out symbolism, metaphors, and resonance so that readers will connect to the main ideas and themes we explore. People who are closed off, even partially, tend to miss countless excellent ideas that come their way. The world is jam-packed with ideas waiting for you to notice them.
Here are three top tips for staying open to quality material you might be bypassing:
1. Receptive writers cast their nets widely first and narrow down later.
Since March, millions of workers around the world have worked from our home offices. Conferencing online at a distance has become an ordinary new feature of how the workplace functions in 2020 and into 2021. It can be pretty easy to feel isolated and in one’s own bubble when the majority of social interactions after the workday are also often at the click of a button rather than in our living rooms or at restaurants.
As much as my inner introvert rejoices at a good curl-up-and-read fest, I recognize the need for hanging out and absorbing ideas from friends and fellow creative makers. Nobody is an island, even with Covid-19 social distancing. We need to keep coming into regular contact with others’ everyday conversations about hopes, dreams, fears, complaints, and even the seemingly silly minutiae or anecdotes that used to be more commonplace before quarantine.
Art thrives on community and the spontaneous mingling of ideas. Cast your net wide and get a few recommendations to keep ideas flowing.
If you’re not conversing or overhearing juicy, disparate, random or rambling conversation on the regular, you’re probably missing out on some very important ideas that could positively impact your writing. Don’t immediately scroll past an argument or debate on Twitter or Facebook—read through strands of comments, even if you don’t comment.
Put your favorite podcast on while you work out at home or take a quick run around the block. If you don’t have a favorite podcast or book or song at the moment, text a friend or ten and find out what they’re listening to or reading recently.
2. Slow and steady: receptive writers listen and give themselves time to reflect before creating.
I’ll admit: this is a hard one for me. My mind is almost always bursting with ideas, and never more so than when I read an article that inspires me or watch a video or overhear a conversation that strike a chord. It helps my writing, though, to remind myself that when I come across new inspiration that I need to tune in and give the information a little bit of time to settle before reacting.
Give yourself some time to take in new ideas by keeping a notebook handy to jot down initial impressions, conversation snippets, or notes, but then give that information some hours or even days to rest in your notebook before using them in a new piece. This little grace period between gleaning exciting ideas and integrating or exploring them will deepen your pre-writing period. Your subconscious mind will make connections between ideas that may surprise and delight you.
Great news: often, in the hours or days in-between first hearing or learning of something and beginning to write, several other tangentially- related ideas or pieces of information will also cross your path and enrich or change the focus of your initial idea, enriching your theme in the process. We’re a fast-paced culture, but our writing process doesn’t have to be rocket-launch speed.
We hear not nearly often enough: slow it down, reflect. I’ll say this again because it’s just so soothing: slow it down.
3. Receptive Writers don’t put too much pressure on a single idea.
Here’s something we don’t tend to talk about much, but it’s as true today as it was a hundred or even a thousand years ago for scribes: don’t expect your entire writing career or reputation to be built on one magnum opus. Realize that there are many, many ideas out there and likewise a multitude ways to interpret, structure, and create art from those ideas.
Think of your writing as a marathon run, rather than a sprint. Explore each idea to the best of your ability with what you know now, but realize that you have many chances to edit and/or add to your ideas during the course of your writing career. Also, if the piece doesn’t immediately gel or if it changes focus or shape, that’s a natural part of the process. If this project doesn’t pan out after endless weeks or months of struggling, it’s okay to let it go and begin another project. There are endless other possibilities to pursue at any given time that may refresh your writing—remain flexible and open-minded about beginning again.
Ease off the pressure for the latest project to showcase every single one of your writing talents, and ease into the openness to each idea’s potential to bring out new qualities in your writing during the writing process.
Using our natural observational skills will deepen our writing. In addition, such receptivity will work wonders for creating fresh, authentic writing again and again.
Care to learn more? Clickety-click: Developing Your Authentic Voice. Starts January 8, 2021. Sign-ups now open!
My Conceptual Photo in an Exhibit: Nov. 25, 2020-Feb 23, 2021! 🎉📸
I received splendid news today: my conceptual photo was chosen as part of a photography magazine’s online art show, A Show of Hands!
Check out not just my photo, “I had the Radio on,” but also 49 other fabulous photos from shutterbugs all over the globe. An honor to have my work included in such talented company. Don’t Take Pictures gallery show.
The show will run from today through February 23, 2021.
Fantastic News: 3 Books of Tips in 1 Handy Volume! :)
I’m thrilled to announce that my three reference books for writers are now available in one handy-dandy volume. This includes In a Flash!, Poetry Power, AND Imagery-Making/Photography for Writers.
Packed with oodles of prompts and tips to get your pen moving in several genres.
Get inspired, and get your e-book copy today! Click this link: Flash Writing Series.
"3 Common Myths about Writing Graphic Novels"
Thrilled to say that my article about writing graphic novels was published today by Women on Writing. Ta-da!
To learn more, check out my Fundamentals of Graphic Novel class. Sign-ups open now through the first day of class: Friday, October 30th.
“3 Common Myths about Writing Graphic Novels”
By: Melanie Faith
I’ve enjoyed reading graphic novels for the past ten years. These character-driven books are often humorous and fun-loving, but they can also be thought-provoking or even gritty and dramatic page-turners. They might explore historical landscapes, our current world settings, or a future planetary colony.
The astounding variety of graphic novels earns this genre a coveted spot on my overflowing bookshelves, always.
If you’re anything like me, though, you might initially have thought, this is so cool, but I can’t even draw a person to scale. I could never do that.
Let’s dive into three of the biggest myths about crafting graphic novels and take heart that not only can we read graphic novels, but we can write our own quite well, too:
1. You have to be a great artist who gets compliments on their drawing talent. False. By far, this is the myth I hear most. The thing is, if you can draw a stick figure, you can craft a comic. If you can sketch a caricature, you can create a comic. If you can run computer software, you could also make a graphic novel using software. If you have a pal who loves to draw, you could team up (you craft the story, they craft the illustrations) or you could hire an illustrator to bring your dialogue and characters to life for a collaboration that way.
Comics are an elastic, vivacious art form, made in all of these ways and more. For example, sometimes elements such as photographs and collage are also the art in “drawing” a comic.
There are as many styles of comics as you can imagine: from hand-made photocopied zines to computer-drawn animations and figures, from works produced on a shoestring budget of a single author with a day job in another industry to comics backed by an international corporation or a local small or regional publishing house, and everything in-between. Best of all: they are all legitimate art forms.
Just as we wouldn’t say that Gertrude Stein was any less of a poet than Shakespeare, they just both had vastly different literary styles and subject matter, a one-person, hand-sketched comic still belongs to the art form.
We can always take art classes later to improve our drawing skills if that’s our aim; what’s most important is that all of us, starting where we are, today, with whatever our native talent, can create an outline or caricature with personality and have fun exploring just what and where that drawing will take us and our stories. With the skills we have at this very moment.
2. You have to have an earth-shattering plot to begin a project like that. False. There are graphic novels about as many happenings under the sun as one can imagine, from cooking (Relish: My Life in the Kitchen) to living with mental illness (Mania, Depression, Michelangelo, and Me). While some awesome comics do celebrate celebrities (Josephine Baker and Photographic: The Life of Graciela Iturbide) or are set against a backdrop of political revolutions (Persepolis), just as many great comics detail what it’s like to be an everyday person with hopes and dreams that are frequently dashed in this topsy-turvy world.
There are graphic novels that explore familial and relationship turmoil, what it’s like to be a teen or a college student living away from home for the first time, or an immigrant learning a new language and culture, or a struggling middle-aged father who has lost a child, or someone living with an infertility struggle.
If it’s happened to you or someone you’re close to or if you’ve observed a truth about life, it could make an excellent graphic novel. Comics are about human experience, and the range and breadth of human experience is vast and breathtakingly promising for a writer.
3. You have to have the entire plot figured out before even bothering to start. False. One of the great aspects of writing comics is that you can begin by brainstorming a protagonist. Someone with a personality. Someone with struggles. Someone with a set-back and hidden (or not-so-hidden) dreams. And that protagonist’s little (or big) corner of the world (aka: setting). And that protagonist’s antagonist. One spark of inspiration builds and leads to the next.
And hey, you don’t even have to create a fictional character from scratch if you don’t want to—you can be the protagonist of you own story in graphic memoir. Many established and award-winning graphic artists, like Alison Bechdel and Lucy Knisley, are heroine characters in their books. Graphic memoirs can be autofiction, too. What a diverse genre!
It bears repeating: it doesn’t take a degree or special talent in art per say to create a narrative that meshes with artistic imagery to develop story. If you can doodle some forms in a margin, you can create a comic sketch. If you can pen a vignette or a short story-length tale with some conflict and characterizations and setting, you can develop the working start for a great graphic novel.
Whether you chose to buddy up with a trained artist or collage the scene yourself or incorporate photos or draw outlines and squiggles of your own or explore computerized software to craft drawings, you already have the basic building blocks to begin in this fascinating genre.