2013 MUSE Online Writers Conference

One Day Workshops offered by Crescent Moon Press 

Come Enter My World. Tips and Tricks for Worldbuilding by L.V. Pires – Friday, Oct 11

Learn to create imaginary worlds that strengthen the believability of your prose. Used extensively by science fiction and fantasy writers, worldbuilding is an essential tool that helps readers buy-in to your alternate universe. Tips such as the top-down and bottom-up approach to worldbuilding will be discussed as well as methods of constructing context and consistency in your setting details.

You can click on the link above or click here to register.

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Save the Date, Creativity Kick-Off

 
 
October 20th at 2 pm
Annapolis Library, 1410 West Street
 
Kick-Off PiBoIdMo and/or NaNoWrMo by gathering 
with fellow authors and illustrators. 
 
Meet a writing buddy, join a critique group, and enjoy a motivating afternoon ready to launch a creative frenzy! Bring your notebook/sketchbook along for some inspirational and motivational tips and exercises to get your creativity flowing. 
 
Interested in more info?
Reply to Sarah at sarahmd@gmail.com and/or Lisa at lisavpires@hotmail.com

Drumroll, please…

Check this out!

Desiree Smith-Daughety | D. Lara Smith's avatarDesiree Smith-Daughety | D. Lara Smith

I’m trying to contain my excitement, but good luck with that.  I want to announce the launch of a new website to be launched on September 13th — that’s Friday the 13th! I am lucky to have met two wonderful writers who spur my imagination and challenge me to s-t-r-e-t-c-h my creative leanings… and this will be the ongoing result.

Here’s the info — I hope you’ll check us out at Waterfrontwriters.com!

Waterfront Writers

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Writer’s Toolkit: Pray Mantis Tactics for the Real Writer

Have you ever been reading a book and thought, Man, this is such a good idea, someone should write a book about this and then slapped yourself on the forehead, realizing you were actually reading the book about this idea and are now eternally grateful you didn’t say this one particular thought out loud?

Well, if you have, you’re not alone.  You are, in fact, a writer and it happens to the best of us.  I remember the days when I read a book for pure entertainment—those days were fun, and still happen, occasionally, but only when I keep my analytical eye closed tight.

Typically, I analyze every scene – does it turn?

Every word – is it the right one?

Every plot point – is it necessary?

And when I find something good, I mean really good, I devour it—yes, like a Pray Mantis,  slicing and chewing from one paragraph to the next, with the promise to reuse that one thought, image or character again, someday, but in a new and personally touched way.

This is what great writers have been doing for eons.  T.S. Eliot once said, “Mediocre writers borrow.  Great writers steal.”  Not plagiarizing but allowing yourself to be influenced and not just by books.

I’ve robbed ideas from the headlines.

Snatched up snippets of language from co-workers.

Even reworked characters I’ve fallen in love with from film and TV into short stories and poems.

There’s no reason to ever feel like you don’t know what to write about.  It’s everywhere, all around you, and especially in books, the good ones, even some of the bad, and can be worked and reworked, chewed up and regurgitated, if you’re a Pray Mantis that is, with your own personal touch into something great.

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