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March 2010

Reminder: Book Buzz at TPL tomorrow at 7 p.m.

March 22, 2010 | Karl Schroeder | Comments (1)

The chat will be happening athttp://bookbuzzdiscussion.torontopubliclibrary.ca.  All are welcome!  You can chat with me and Dawn Connolly from TPL, about writing, the thrilling roller-coaster ride that is the life of a writer, and everything cool and wacky that's going on in the world right now.

First writer's workshop: what to bring

March 22, 2010 | Karl Schroeder | Comments (0)

This Thursday, starting at 5:30, I'll be hosting the first of three writing workshops at the Merril Collection (actually, in the basement of the Lillian H. Smith branch where the library is located).  These workshops are full up now, but if you're interested you can still call the library to get put on a waiting list.

In any case, pretty well everybody who's signed up has asked what they should bring.  Here's my suggestion:

  • A notebook and pen
  • Any notes, scraps of paper with scribbled ideas, and unfinished short stories or outlines that you may want to work on.  This is a creativity workshop, so the idea is to unblock our minds and look at how ideas evolve from a nascent stage all the way up to solid story plans.
  • Your imagination.
That's it.  We'll be doing some exercises, but also we'll be just talking about the writing process and about how to organize your time, your thoughts, and your creative planning to get from idea to published work.  I'm looking forward to it and hope to see you there!

Writer in residence workshops are full up

March 17, 2010 | Karl Schroeder | Comments (0)

This happened a bit more suddenly than expected:  my upcoming workshops are full.  There may still be cancellations, so if you wanted to attend but just hadn't gotten around to registering yet, you should check back in just prior to the dates to see if any spaces have opened up.  

Just as a reminder, these are the events:

Thursday, March 25, 5:30-8:15:  Integrating Idea and Story

Everyone has ideas for a story, but very few people actually get a story completely written. This workshop will assist aspiring science fiction writers by clarifying the process of developing the story from the idea.

Thursday, April 15, 5:30-8:15 pm:  Short Story Structure and Plot

Attendees will learn how to identify and correct story weaknesses and sharpen their writing skills, while writing short science fiction and fantasy stories.

Thursday, May 20, 5:30-8:15 pm: Wrangling Your Novel Into Shape  

This workshop deals with the process of creating science fiction, how writers can identify and correct their mistakes, when to rewrite and when to stop.

 I'll shortly write more about what to expect, and what to bring, for those who'll be coming.

Thanks to everybody who came out!

March 8, 2010 | Karl Schroeder | Comments (0)

I had a really good time on Saturday night--not so much with the talk I gave as of course with the conversation that followed.  I'd like to thank everybody who came out.  I'm happily reading submitted manuscripts and getting ready for my next round of scheduled meetings.  And, of course, I'm preparing for the first workshop I'll be holding on March 25th.

Next library event: Saturday night in the future

March 4, 2010 | Karl Schroeder | Comments (0)

I'll be downtown at the Metro Reference library at Yonge and Bloor on Saturday night, giving a talk.  Why don't you come down and join us?  It should be a lively discussion.  We'll be discussing the following topic:

Science Fiction and Foresight: Is it true that science fiction is about predicting the future? Karl Schroeder discusses when science fiction and foresight are the same and when they are different.
Saturday, March 6, 7-8:15 pm
Toronto Reference Library
Beeton Auditorium


Which kind of writer are you? --Part 2

March 1, 2010 | Karl Schroeder | Comments (2)

Writing is not one activity, but a number of activities. We tend to only value the time we actually spend at the word processor, and since few of us get much time to spend there, we're constantly asking ourselves--and established professionals--"how do you find the time to write?"

Here's the secret of making time to write: writing is many different activities, and each activity demands a different kind of time.

You can write in the shower. You can write on the bus. You can write at the office, or in front of the TV. All you have to do is perform the appropriate kind of task in each of these time slots. If, when the weekend comes, you find four hours in which to do draft work, you could write half a chapter in that time, provided all the other preliminary work has been done in other time slots.  But you could also edit, or network with other writers, or--that much-maligned but essential, time-honoured classic--lie on the couch and stare at the wall.

The Dreamer

Let me introduce one of your writing selves--possibly the least appreciated but most important one:  the dreamer.  

We all daydream. Unfortunately, after having had our knuckles rapped for it in class, many of us feel guilty when we do it. Get over it! Daydreaming is one of your most important activities as a writer. Learn to be proud of those times when you sit slack-jawed, eyes slowly crossing. If anyone asks you what you’re doing, you can truthfully answer, “I’m working.”

Your daydreaming time can happen anywhere. The trick is to be aware that you’re doing it. Most of our daily fantasies go by half-consciously, and we forget them immediately. Learn to know that you’re doing it, and commit to paper or file the products of your daydreaming.  One way to do this is to keep an idea diary. If you work at a computer all day, leave a small text-editor file or mail message open, and when ideas come to you, jot them in this. Then save the file or mail the message to yourself at the end of the day. The important thing is to recognize when your daydreams spark interesting ideas. Then find some way of ensuring that you remember those ideas. Don’t try to schedule this creativity. Just be ready to catch the moment when it happens on its own.

The average SF writer walks around with a head full of half-finished (and often half-baked) ideas. Anything might generate a story idea--the news, a chance conversation, something you read. Such ideas take the form of little snippets, like “What if you could use nanotechnology to reshape someone's face at will, thus making them into a real-life doppelganger?” Or, “Maybe we could build giant balloon habitats in the upper atmosphere of Uranus.” We tend to have a teeming mass of such ideas floating around in our heads, most of which we're only half aware of.

I refer to such half-finished ideas as “sparks.” They aren't complete enough to become the basis of a story. If I'm interested in a particular area (say, nanotechnology), then I tend to accumulate sparks in that area. Sparks can be anything: ideas for gadgets, visions of alien places, bits of dialog that don't lead anywhere.

The writer with a lot of sparks and no story usually thinks of himself as “blocked”--feeling the urge to write, but having no subject to write about. The sense of frustration this engenders is extremely valuable; it sets the subconscious mind in motion to try to come up with a storyline.

Stories happen when these sparks come together in new combinations. Suddenly everything--character, setting, plot, and idea--just fits into place. It's a frustratingly random occurrence for most authors, but there's a lot you can do to encourage the process. We'll look at the what, where and when of these things in a future post.