Wendylicious Wednesday Weekly Write

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Wendylicious Wednesday Weekly Write

Every Wednesday is a Wendylicious Wednesday!  Each week, I will post a weekly writing challenge for you to complete.  These weekly challenges will give you ideas as a starting point for a new poem, story, paragraph in the novel you’re currently working on or it could become the opening paragraph to the book you’ve always wanted to write.  Or it can be for your NaNoWriMo story.

It would be great to share your Wendylicious Writing with our community of Wendylicious Writers, so post in the comments section, email me at: wendyliciouswriters@hotmail.com or join as a Gold Member to receive feedback on the task.

Carol Ann Duffy: The Wound in Time

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In my many roles as a teacher, a student, a reader and a writer, Carol Ann Duffy has always astounded and inspired me.  Her poem ‘The Wound in Time’ speaks with respect to those fallen to mark 2018 Remembrance Day.

Within the poem Duffy also asks: ‘What happened next?’  In answering her question the repetition of ‘War’ reminds us that after the ‘war to end all wars’, ‘War’ is what happened ‘after that’.  ‘And now?’  she asks.  ‘War’ once again is the reply.

‘We learn nothing from our endless sacrifice’ is the sad and scathing truth that world leaders must be reminded of.  It seems to be a call to the public to peacefully protest and vote our way out of conflicts and more ‘War’.  Here is Duffy reading her brilliant and powerful poem:  The Wound in Time

Duffy has been an excellent poet laureate.  Her role will be hard to fill.  I think Lemn Sissay is available…

Wendylicious Wednesday Weekly Write

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Every Wednesday is a Wendylicious Wednesday!  Each week, I will post a weekly writing challenge for you to complete.  These weekly challenges will give you ideas as a starting point for a new poem, story, paragraph in the novel you’re currently working on or it could become the opening paragraph to the book you’ve always wanted to write.  Or it can be for your NaNoWriMo story.

It would be great to share your Wendylicious Writing with our community of Wendylicious Writers, so post in the comments section, email me at: wendyliciouswriters@hotmail.com or join as a Gold Member to receive feedback on the task.

Write To The End, Before You Edit

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Write to the end, before you edit.

It’s tempting to start writing or typing and then immediately delete it.  Writing my first book, I spent months rewriting the first page without getting beyond the first chapter.  However, I only knew exactly what needed to be kept or deleted from the opening chapter and first few sentences when I had finished writing the book.

When you start writing, the characters can take you in many directions.  You must trust your intuition and your characters and allow them to navigate the journey.  Once you’ve reached your destination, the end, you can go back to the start – to those crucial first few words – and begin to edit.

That’s another reason I love NaNoWriMo.  It forces you to get words on the page, to get to the end of the month with 50,000 words.  Once you have them, then (and only then) you can edit, adding or deleting appropriately for your characters and your creation.

Wendylicious Wednesday Weekly Write

Slide1

Every Wednesday is a Wendylicious Wednesday!  Each week, I will post a weekly writing challenge for you to complete.  These weekly challenges will give you ideas as a starting point for a new poem, story, paragraph in the novel you’re currently working on or it could become the opening paragraph to the book you’ve always wanted to write.  Or it can be for your NaNoWriMo story.

It would be great to share your Wendylicious Writing with our community of Wendylicious Writers, so post in the comments section, email me at: wendyliciouswriters@hotmail.com or join as a Gold Member to receive feedback on the task.

November Poetry Book Club

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Each month, we hold a Wendylicious Writers Poetry Book Club and online chat to discuss the books.  Following the recent nominations for the TS Eliot prize, November’s book club selections are: Zaffar Kunial’s Us and Tracy K. Smith’s Wade in the Water.

Grab a copy of the books and join us for our online book club meet on Monday 26th November.

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Wendylicious Writers: NaNoWriMo

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This year, our Wendylicious Writers will be taking part in National Novel Writing Month. For the month of November, writers set a goal of writing 50,000 words by the 30th November.  It’s a great way to get a first draft written.  Many writers get stuck editing the first page or staring at a blank screen or page; this challenge forces you to keep writing every single day with a clear goal in mind.  You can then spend the Christmas holidays improving and editing once you have that elusive first draft.  Sign up here: NaNoWriMo

If you get stuck through the month, you can use the Wendylicious Wednesday Weekly Write tasks as a boost of ideas and next steps for your writing.

Top tip:  leave a half finished sentence at the end of each day, that way you immediately have a way in to your writing the next day.

Good luck!

Wendylicious Wednesday Weekly Write

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Every Wednesday is a Wendylicious Wednesday!  Each week, I will post a weekly writing challenge for you to complete.  These weekly challenges will give you ideas as a starting point for a new poem, story, paragraph in the novel you’re currently working on or it could become the opening paragraph to the book you’ve always wanted to write.

It would be great to share your Wendylicious Writing with our community of Wendylicious Writers, so post in the comments section, email me at: wendyliciouswriters@hotmail.com or join as a Gold Member to receive feedback on the task.

Defy Your Critics, ‘Bird Scene’ Style

Slide1As part of my daughter’s recovery after an emergency operation to remove her appendix, we watched Victorious.  Every day.  For two weeks.  Every single episode, at least twice.  We even bought the soundtrack.  Not only did I learn every song, word for word, I actually learnt a valuable lesson about my own writing.

In the ‘Bird Scene’ episode, the main character, Tori, who is a student at a prestigious Hollywood Arts drama school, had to perform a scene to pass a test.  Her first performance seemed to go without a hitch, but she failed.  The second performance, she added more props and delivered her lines equally well, but again, she failed.  The third time, Tori added props, staging, lights, costume, the works, and at the end of the scene she asked her teacher: “So, did I pass?”  The same question Tori had asked at the end of her first two performances.  The teacher said no.  This time, she responded that she thought he was a great teacher and all but she had worked very hard on the scene, she did the best she could, gave it everything she had so even if he didn’t like it, she was pleased with her work and her performance.  Her teacher began to clap.  Finally, she’d passed the ‘Bird Scene’ test.  She believed in her work with absolute conviction, and that, in fact, was the test.

I’ve come to realise (obviously the hard way) that this is how I have come to feel about my own writing.  Not everyone will like what I write.  But that’s OK.  The most important thing is that I work hard, I continue to learn my craft, apply those skills, and write the best poem, novel, play or post I can.  Simply because I love the writing process.  If someone likes a post, subscribes, becomes a member, publishes my work or puts on one of my plays, that is fabulous.  However, it can only ever be the cherry on the cake.  The most important part is not asking: Did I pass the test?  The most important question is: Am I happy with what I have written?

So, rather than being crushed by rejection or a subjective judgement, check only with your instincts.  Did you work hard on it?  Is it really a great piece of writing?  If your gut says yes, don’t remove a character, word or line that you know is right for your work.  Equally, don’t be forced to add a character, word or line that isn’t right for your work, even if it is the editor asking you to.  Rachel Hollis, the brilliant author of ‘Girl Wash Your Face’, said that the publisher asked her to include sex in one of her first books.  It was around the time Shades of Grey had become popular.  However, Hollis knew it wasn’t right for her to write in that way or to include that in her story, so she declined their suggestion and went on to sell her book to an audience that was right for her work.  Believe in your work with absolute conviction, but first make it the best it can be.

October Books of the Month

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At the end of June, I drove to the beautiful town of Ledbury for the annual poetry festival.  Jackie Kay‘s poetry reading was funny, heart warming and ‘got you in the throat’.  Kay’s beautiful Scottish accent added to the depth and rhythm of the words on the page.  Her collection Darling includes new and selected poems ranging from her 1991 Adoption Papers collection, through to her new poems, including the title poem.  Since the brilliant Ledbury Festival, I have revisited Kay’s collection many times.  This month, I couldn’t help but return to Kay’s wit, honesty and skill.

Jo Bell‘s closing speech at the end of the National Writer’s Conference was a call for writers to be courageous.  She encouraged us to try, to apply, to ask.  Not only did listening to Bell’s brilliant speech and her ‘Performing Poetry’ workshop inspire me as a writer, reading her work is inspiring too.  Whether you write fiction or non-fiction or just enjoy reading, Kith is another brilliant collection to buy this month.