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About Me Member Editor mightier-thanUnknown Recent Activity Deviant for 11 Months
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Club Journal - March 15 - March 21

Journal Entry: Sat Mar 14, 2009, 10:00 PM





MT Basics

Welcome to =mightier-than a dA club for writers. We are here for any and every kind of writer - no matter what genre, skill-level, following, or style.

Join
Join us by adding us to your deviantwatch list :+devwatch: and we'll return the favor!

To be added to our "Member List" please send us a note with your pen/real name, your genre, and one word to describe yourself! See our shoutboard for examples!

Submissions
:star:updated:star:
Send us a note with a link to the deviation you are submitting along with its genre and a sentence stating that you give our club permission to repost the deviation as a club submission!

If you are submitting a work for review/critique please add that in your note so we can categorize it accordingly!

Our Journal
Our journal will be updated at least once a week and each journal will contain:

  1. News/Updates

  2. dA Writer Spotlight

  3. Prompt Box(weekly)

  4. Article of the Week

  5. Resource of the Week


Our Contests
We will be taking over =la-beck's Two Worlds contest once it enters its second run. We are also looking for contest ideas in the future. If you would like to help donate subscriptions to contest winners please submit us a note!

Our Members & Staff
We are a supportive, developing, growing community. Please visit our members and actually comment on their work -- it is the best way to ensure the same reciprocation of enthusiasm for your work!

If you would like to become a team member please contact us!


News & Updates



:star:It has been a while since I had the time and state of mind to revamp this club but here it is, and here I am. If you would like to be a staff member, please let me know!

:star:We will be taking over the founder =la-beck's Two World Contest when it enters its second round. Please check out her journal for more information on that contest which we will inherit!

:star: Content & contest ideas are needed!!!

:star: Stamps would be awesome if someone wants to make one!

:star: We would like to do a monthly collection of member works in a sort of online journal publishing where one deviation will contain the club's work. What say you?

:star: We are looking for affiliates! Please let us know if you are interested!




dA Writer Spotlight

=VertigoArt is an amazing member of the writing community here on dA with experimental prose and classic form, he is a writer worthy of your reading.

If he isn't busy hosting contests, getting daily lit deviations, or playing a round of "pass the poem," =VertigoArt is churning out wonderful poetry that will stir imaginations, walk you down memory lane, and reach the deepest and darkest of the human emotional spectrum.

Congratulations, :iconvertigoart: - Write On!



Prompt Box: March 15th - March 21st


Hello, there! Welcome to the Prompt Box! Here you will find 7 writing prompts to get your creative juices flowing. The rules for these prompts are simple!

  1. Write at least 500 words based on the prompt. It doesn't have to be spectacular, awesome, stunning, or catchy. It just has to get your mind working and your pen or fingertips writing.

  2. Feel free to submit one prompt or the whole week's prompts in a deviation and send us a note or link to it so we can add it to our gallery OR respond to this journal with your prompt responses!


That's it for how to use these prompts, now, here they are!

Sunday March 15th:

A group of cavemen witnesses a strange light in the night sky.

from "The Writer's Book of Matches" (c) 2005 Fresh Boiled Peanuts Staff

Monday March 16th:



image property of ~aperitif titled "escape"

Tuesday March 17th:

"It's lonely out here... surrounded by all these people."

from "The Writer's Book of Matches" (c) 2005 Fresh Boiled Peanuts Staff

Wednesday March 18th:



image property of =neslihans titled "204"

Thursday March 19th:

"People don't talk like that anymore..."

Friday March 20th:



image property of *mstargazer titled "From a Window's View"

Saturday March 21st:


image property of ~dskphotography titled "The Dress"





Article of the Week

Get Messy with Your First Draft
February 10, 2009
by Elizabeth Sims

Rough up your first draft to get to the good stuff.


As Ernest Hemingway famously said, “The first draft of anything is shit.” For years, I didn’t understand. When I started writing fiction seriously, I kept trying to get it right the first time.

Every night after clocking out from my job in a bookstore, I’d sit at my favorite coffee shop with a yellow pad and the pens I collected from publishers’ reps, and carefully work on my first novel. I’d write my minimum 300-word requirement, staying inside the lines and squeezing out every word with great thought and deliberation. Grant me, at least, that I was disciplined: I counted my words, and if I got to 299, I wouldn’t go back and add “very” to a sentence—I had to at least begin the next one.

By that method, I managed to produce quite a lot of pages. But guess what? My prose didn’t consistently swing, sizzle or startle. It took me a long time to figure out Hemingway’s hidden meaning, and longer still to apply it. Over time, as I got rougher with my first drafts, my finished work got better and better.

BE HONEST

Why does a coherent first draft give birth to a stilted finished product? Because it means you haven’t let it flow. You haven’t given yourself permission to make mistakes because you haven’t forgiven yourself for past ones. Admit it: Unless your throttle’s wide open, you’re not giving it everything you’ve got.

One day I realized that creativity in writing isn’t a linear process, even though we read in a linear fashion and the words must go on the page one after the other; even though we must put our thoughts and words in order so the reader can make sense of them.

Writing, in fact, is the only art that is literally one-dimensional. If you can be gut-level honest with yourself, you’ve really got a shot at your readers. And the only way to find that honesty is to not overthink it.

For your writing to come alive—to be multi-dimensional—you must barter away some control. The rewards are worth it.

LEARN TO LOVE ANARCHY

Ignore sequence while writing your first draft. Beginning writers will often say, “I’ve got the basic story figured out, but I don’t know how to present it so it hangs together. I’m never sure what should come next.”

Nothing is as freeing as writing what comes to mind next, not necessarily what must come next. Transitions are unimportant. Hey, don’t take my word for it—trust John Dos Passos, Patricia Highsmith, Mark Twain and William Shakespeare. Exposition is always less important than you think it is. Just focus on what happens next.

Hemingway didn’t mean, though, that if you begin with crap, dung or merde, you’ll end up with something far better without much effort. He also didn’t mean that it’s OK to start with a weak premise.

He meant that the first execution of your ideas must be as unfettered as possible. Which will result in—yes!—some crap: false starts, pretentiousness, clunky images and clichés. Fine. Get them out now. They’ll contaminate the good stuff only until you get around to your second draft.

GET LOOSE

Relax, physically and mentally. If, as I do, you write your first drafts longhand, consider your pen a paintbrush. Hold it relaxed in your hand and move it from your shoulder, instead of with your fingers. Your whole arm will move freely, and you’ll pour out the words, as well as banish carpal tunnel syndrome all to hell.

Legibility is overrated. Remember that.

The common wisdom in writing workshops is that you shouldn’t stop to revise. But let’s be honest: That’s unrealistic because sometimes you really do see another possibility right away, and you should be free to pursue it. I recommend over-writing as you go.

If, in a single moment, you think of two different ways of saying something, just write both, one after the other. Later you’ll be able to decide which is better.

Write a box around a phrase; stack two competing adjectives atop each other; make notes in the margin. I use the margins for research notes such as, “what’s position of Sirius over L.A./August?”

Fresh sheets aren’t just for motels. Use paper! I’m a big believer in using exactly the amount of natural resources you need, and no less. If you want to go off on a new tangent that’s longer than a sentence, rip off your current page and start a fresh one. Never crowd a new thought into a crevice of the page you’re on.

And for the love of God, don’t wait for the new thought to fully form before you put it down. More often than not, as soon as you write the first shard of that new thought, it’ll work itself to fullness as you write. And that’s the magic we all live for, isn’t it?

If you want to add a word or a block of text, don’t stop at using carats to show an insert. Circle stuff, draw arrows, loop one piece of text into the middle of another. And keep going. If it’s instantly obvious that one version of a word, sentence or graph is better, strike out the bad one and go on without looking back.

If you compose on a keyboard, make the “return” button your best friend: Set off a new idea by hitting two carriage returns. Let your fingers splash on the keyboard. Let typos stand. Don’t use the cut and paste functions while creating a first draft.

Note that I’m not telling you to write as fast as you possibly can, as in speed for speed’s sake. No. Take time to pause and reflect. Then take whatever comes without judging it too much.

Why’s it so important to suspend judgment when writing? Because that freedom opens you to the surprising stuff you never saw coming; stuff that makes you smile as you sit there in the coffee shop, your mug of joe cooling because you’ve forgotten to take a sip in 15 solid minutes.

When beginning a writing session, new authors often feel that they must jump off to an excellent start, when all they really need is to start. In this, there’s no difference between me and you.

Often I have to slog through crap to produce decent writing, especially if I’ve laid off from it while doing revisions. But I never despair, having learned that if I just keep going, I’ll get to someplace worthwhile.

FACE YOUR SECOND DRAFT

If you’ve practiced slovenliness with a liberal hand, you’ll be delighted at how much fun your second draft will be. After I’ve got a chapter or two roughed out, I go from my handwritten pages to my PC, where I edit and rewrite as I go, adding new text and omitting what—I can now clearly see—doesn’t work.

Thus I establish the rough rhythm that works for me: a couple of days writing longhand, then a day at the old PC. Some authors work through their entire manuscript in longhand before sitting down to type, and that’s dandy, too. Most beginning writers cling to every word they’ve written. But if you practice looseness and receptivity when writing your first draft, the day will come during revisions when you realize you have a surplus of good writing to sort through. You’ll know joy.

I just took a spin through a couple of my old Writers at Work volumes (The Paris Review Interviews). Along with George Plimpton’s interview of each famous author, the Review reproduces pages from their drafts.

I studied some of these:

CYNTHIA OZICK: Her handwritten draft page is a beautiful mess, containing almost more strike-outs than unscathed text.

RALPH ELLISON: He used a typewriter, then marked up his pages with a ruthless hand.

ERNEST HEMINGWAY: His handwritten page from “The Battler” shows only one cross-out. However, between that and the published story, the passage shows subtle but significant differences.

During the course of writing six novels, I realized that the days when the truth shone brightest were the days my pen flowed the freest and messiest across the pages. And I was rewarded with longer and longer satisfactory passages.

It’s paradoxical that giving up control rewards you with what you seek most: concise, insightful work.

2009 (c) Writer's Digest.com [link]




Resources of the Week


Story Skeleton 101

written by =la-beck


POETRY RESOURCES
leaving these up because they are awesome sauce.

Write Express - A FREE online dictionary of rhyming words. Just type in the word you need a rhyme for, and it brings up results! [link]

Shadow Poetry - Looking for poetry tutorials? This is your spot. Learn everything you need to know about every type of poetry out there in a flash. You can join contests, submit poems, buy poetry books and much more! [link]

Poem Hunter - A large database of poets and poems with a great search engine. Contains poems from poets all around the world. Basically an online poetry search engine. [link]

Poet Bay - A poetry webpage where you can publish your poems and short stories. [link]

Aha! Poetry - Read poetry publications online, post your own poems, learn about poetry and more... [link]


`Nicasus made this!

  • Mood: Eager
  • Reading: Shakespeare

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Comments


:iconlilymewlis97:
thanks..everyone on here is awesome
i'm emily
psuedo is the screen name
i just write
poetry or novels-whatever you wanna call it-literature i guess
and i dont wanna sum myself up into one word if thats ok...i use to love making castles out of cardboard boxes, but i dont plan on going back into them now b/c they're kind of small...
oh and i kind of talk in metaphors...
but anyway...add me as a member
and thanks for the welcome

--
Save a drum...
Bang a Drummer >_<
:iconellablack:
Em! you joined here too?

--
1 2 Freddy's coming for you
3 4 Better lock your door
5 6 Grab your crucifix
7 8 Gonna stay up late
9 10 Never sleep again.
:iconlilymewlis97:
i guess so....
lol
i dont remember...

--
Save a drum...
Bang a Drummer >_<
:iconellablack:
:giggle: nice

--
1 2 Freddy's coming for you
3 4 Better lock your door
5 6 Grab your crucifix
7 8 Gonna stay up late
9 10 Never sleep again.
:iconmightier-than:
You're welcome & welcome!!

--
:jsenn: =mightier-than - a dA club for writers
-------------------
Fill your paper with the breathings of your heart. ~William Wordsworth
:iconsilph91:
Ty for adding my 15min old poem ^_^
:iconmightier-than:
=D you're welcome!

--
:jsenn: =mightier-than - a dA club for writers
-------------------
Fill your paper with the breathings of your heart. ~William Wordsworth
:iconnyton:
Thanks for adding my snippets to your collection!

--
"When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro." -HST
:iconmightier-than:
You're welcome!

--
:jsenn: =mightier-than - a dA club for writers
-------------------
Fill your paper with the breathings of your heart. ~William Wordsworth
:iconheart-brokenemo:
thank you!
im going to have a bunch more photos like this coming up and if you want to devwatch me or bookmark my channel you can get more of them... i think im going to have them up within the next week =]

--
-me and jenni are trying to decide what to put here, any ideas?
:llama:

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