healthinusa iwannabethegamer top10softwarereviews artsofthenewworld designforallpeople peopledefinitely news-of-the-world-now some-big-news big-news-magazine modern-cars-now superfastcarsfortomorrow forthebasquetballfans anothereyefornews elblogdelchocolate blogparaemprender bestservicesinmytown Italianbestdesignblog todoparatucelular

Posts tagged as:

memoir writing

Writers Turning With the Clock

by margaret on November 9, 2010

By Marion Roach Smith
LAST WEEK’S MEMOIR CLASS began much like every first-week-of-November class I’ve taught for the last 14 years. No one had agreed to this beforehand. No one had said anything. No memo had gone out. There was no round-robin email suggesting that we turn our writing in any particular direction at the same time we turn back our clocks. It just happened, just like it happens every year. The reason?

Seeking Inspiration to Write?

by margaret on October 21, 2010

By Marion Roach Smith
WHAT INSPIRES YOU? What are you reading? What are you listening to? When writing memoir, are you aware just how positive an influence media can be? If not, you are missing one of the great helpers for those who struggle to write what they know–to put a piece of memoir on paper. That’s right: Help. It’s all around you, if only you know how to identify it. Get this week’s writing tips.

Getting Back to Business of Writing

by margaret on September 13, 2010

By Marion Roach Smith
THE SISTERHOOD OF MEMOIR is alive and well, I’m happy to report. Despite the rumors of the death of publishing, marvelous books continue to appear all the time, many of which are not only great reads, but are also perfect primers for learning to write your own tale. Three books in particular come to mind, all of which I recently read, and all of which reaffirmed for me perhaps the single most important lesson in writing what you know. Remember what that is? Come along, and I’ll remind you.

Pushing Past a Writing Slump

by margaret on July 27, 2010

By Marion Roach Smith
THE SUMMER SLUMP. This is a tough time for writers–that time of year when the most seductive set of temptations to not write beckon: the great outdoors and all its wonders. I mean, who can write in this weather? Who can write when you could instead: swim/sail/run/play tennis/golf/hike, whatever? You can. That is, if you’ll willing to do a simple things. Are you? Then come along.


By Marion Roach Smith
IAM SO EXCITED TO INVITE YOU to come join the just-launched month-long memoir workshop I’m doing on the giant website Beliefnet, where (with a little prodding from yours truly) May has been named Memoir Month! The workshop is called “Writing What You Know” (sound familiar?). Why Beliefnet? Because I believe that writing what you know is the single greatest portal to self discovery. Come take a peek as we gear up, or register to join the free group class.

{ 0 comments }

For Writers, Family as Fodder

by margaret on March 17, 2010

IT’S HERE, FINALLY, Sister Marion says. You think she means Spring, or gardening season, or prepare-to-get-into-bathing-suit season? Nope. Not that. Or, more to the point, all that plus this one other altogether totemic annual moment: that first run of holidays (as opposed to the November-December sleigh ride) during which memoir writers are given ample opportunities to take notes. Get out your notebooks, sisters: Your family is on its way to your holiday table! Good fodder coming right up. How to get ready to write it.

Karr’s ‘Lit,’ One for the Sisters

by margaret on February 17, 2010

PAIGE’S GOOD FRIEND told her that Mary Karr’s Lit was the best non-fiction she’d read in years, that while she couldn’t bear to put it down, the prose was so divine it made her want to stop after each passage just to savor it. This friend is no easy sell when it comes to writing and reading, so OK, said TSP’S Paige: “add that book to my reading list, stat, and here’s why.”

{ 0 comments }

Memoir Tip: Just Say No to the Self-Congratulatory

by margaret on February 4, 2010

SOMETIMES MARION CAN BE SUBTLE. And while no particular incident of that comes to mind right now, she’s sure she occasionally is. Though never when teaching memoir writing, so she knows for certain that she was not a bit subtle in a recent class when she simply declared a total moratorium on the self-congratulatory. Let her explain.

Writing Tip: Angle Your Shots

by margaret on November 8, 2009

smallyellowpad-1THINK IN PROPINQUITIES, says Marion, and yes, she knows: The phrase makes her sound like a librarian. But the wacky word is a reminder to think of your angle shots when you write up a topic like a family holiday. Don’t give us a Polaroid of the day, she says, on your blog or in your journal, but rather some side view that illustrates how you learned a new way to give thanks–like the one she discovered when she brought a New York City cab driver to Thanksgiving dinner. The tale, and the memoir tips.

More Tips for Telling Your Story

by margaret on October 5, 2009

smallyellowpad-1MARION’S BACK where she loves to be, three weeks into teaching a new class on memoir. And it’s a great class: Twenty-one eager writers, all with their own tales, all willing to do the work to get the pieces down. Her favorite problem last week was from one fine young writer who simply admitted, “My story is too big.” Ah. Yes. Too big. Whose isn’t? How to wrestle a big story to the ground.

Movin’ On: Writer’s Block No More

by margaret on August 11, 2009

SmallYellowPad-1STUCK IN CREATIVE NEUTRAL? NO WORRY. Our writing coach in residence, Sister Marion, says phooey to the idea of writer’s block, and proceeds to prove that anyone can barrel through a “block” with this secret weapon: the friendly ear of a sister or sister-friend. Her plan for pushing ahead on your artistic path.

Writing Something? Marion’s Tips

by margaret on June 29, 2009

smallyellowpad-1ARE YOU WRITING SOMETHING? Don’t be shy; everybody is writing something about their lives these days (isn’t that what blogging is?). Though school’s out for the summer where our sister Marion teaches memoir writing, she’s offering up some tactics here to help us sisters get it all down. The first installment is an exercise about finding the story among all those details. You can read it here.

x