
Details: How Little Things Bring Your Writing to Life
Erin Bow, author of Plain Kate and Sorrow's Knot reminded us: "Good details are the heart of good storytelling."
I loved all her strategies for using details to draw the reader's attention to what is important in the story. You can read about how she uses a ladder system to match the level of detail to the emotional intensity of a scene in an interview with Erin for the CANSCAIP blog.
After this session, I decided to add another level to my revision process!
Arc is a Four-Letter Word: Plot Structure for the Architecturally Challenged

"Make your setting a character. Use that to drive your story and your character's journey through your story."
She highly recommends drawing a map and finding interesting places in your story world to build into the plot.
This was a refreshing approach for many of us who feel overwhelmed by all the pointy triangles in traditional plotting diagrams.

According to Shelley Tanaka, long time fiction editor of Groundwood Books, one of the biggest distractions when reading children's book submissions is when the narrator steps out of the child's voice. An important question to ask is: "Would a child say or think this?"
She pointed out that adults are often more sentimental than children are and that's one way the adult perspective can intrude into the child's voice.
"Good writing is not random: It involves artistic decisions, big and small, and the decisions you make about voice may be the most important of all."
Lightning Rods, Agents & Book Deals: Building Your Personal Brand

Keynote: Confessions of a Word Nerd

She talked about loving reading, emotional memories and perseverance.
"Everything we write, it only makes us better."
This sounds so fantastic. The "ladder system" sounds especially intriguing.
ReplyDelete