DENTON WRITERS LEAGUE
FIRST EDITION
MARCH 2004 VOL. 15 NUMBER 3

DWL Home Page: http://byjoni.com/dwl

If you would like a copy of the newsletter e-mailed to you instead of through the US post, please contact George Avera or Joni Latham.


WHERE WE MEET AND WHEN

The second Saturday of every month, at the

Denton Library-North Branch - click here for map 
3020 N. Locust St (corner of Windsor St & N. Locust St)
 Denton, TX

General Meeting 10:30 a.m.

Lunch at Noon at the
 Evergreen Super Buffet - click here for map 
1006 W. University Dr
Denton, TX 76201

NEXT MEETING - MARCH 13, 2004


Guest Speakers

March - Jim Cline of Timberwolf Press
April - Jeff Crilley of Fox 4 News
May - Roxanne Conrad
June - Lillian Stewart Carl
July - Hart Parris - RonJon Publishing
August - Karen DeVinney, Managing Editor-University of North Texas Press
September - Anual Workshop
October - Pamela Stone
November - Gloria Oliver
December - TBA
   

GUESTSPEAKER

Jim Cline CTO and Vice-President of Timberwolf Press. Timberwolf Press was founded in 1999 by Internet Pioneer Patrick Seaman. It is a unique multimedia company that is working to help reinvent the publishing industry by going beyond traditional boundaries in creating and employing new media innovations in print audio, Internet broadcasting, and video opportunities. When acquiring the rights to a book, Timberwolf acquires all the rights to its titles and seeks to fully develop them inall media forms. The company believes that successes in one media help build the other media, increasing the overall lifetime and potential of a title.

Check out their website for submission guidelines. http://www.timberwolfpress.com/


FEBRUARY MEETING RECAP 

Due to inclement weather, our Guestspeaker - Pamela Stone was not able to attend the meeting.  Those members in an attendance conducted an informal discussion on a variety of topics.


Writing the First Novel

Author:  Palmer Owyoung
Date:  25-03-03

Winston Churchill said it best when he wrote - “Writing a book is an adventure: to begin with it is a toy and amusement; then it becomes a master, and than it becomes a tyrant; and the last phase is just as you are about to be reconciled to your servitude - you kill the monster and fling him to the public.”

Writing your first novel is a daunting task. It is a dance; a balancing act between your inner-editor and that part of you that, for some inexplicable reason, wants so badly to put your story down on paper.

I struggled with myself for most of my twenties, including a two year stint in the Peace Corps, where I started and quit twenty different projects. Though I wrote almost every day in my journal and in letters to friends, I could never really get past the inner-editor that kept trashing my stories, in order to write the great American novel that I had anticipated when I’d first arrived in Africa.

I would sit there in the heat of the Namibian desert, banging away on the keys of an old typewriter, romanticizing that the Hemingwayesque setting would somehow provide enough fodder for my imagination and that the book would simply write itself. I’d always make it to about the fifth page before I’d hit a wall and would end up sitting there staring at the blank pages with a despondent and vacuous look in my eyes.

Afraid that I was going to end up a starving writer, I went to graduate school where there was little time to do anything else, but digest and regurgitate esoteric political theories on why dictators preferred briefs over boxers and how this contributed to their bellicose regimes. I was then sidetracked to the second San Francisco gold rush, searching for the next killer app and enough financial freedom to give me the time to write. After the company that I had started went bust I did finally have the time that I needed to write, though not exactly in the way that I’d imagined. I thought that I would be writing my first book on a tropical island with a pina colada in one hand and a pen in the other. Instead I was sitting with my laptop in the corner of a dusty library shushing high school students.

I’ve always said that I hate writing, but I love having written. I thought that writers were supposed to be inspired by the wild lives that they led or the fabulous friends that they had, but instead the tedium and the boredom of the process had always frustrated me. But faced with unemployment and unsure of what I was doing with my life I started to write again.

Writing my first novel gave me the opportunity to figure out my process and what I learned was that, rather than waiting around for inspiration to show up, you just have to slog through the boredom, frustration and tedium to get to your story. What I was surprised to learn was just how much of being able to write well was just showing up every day, writing badly and learning to accept it.

I’ve learned that what works for me is just sitting down at the keyboard and writing as much as I can for as long as I can. Doing this keeps my inner-editor at bay. What I usually come out with is a series of unintelligible sentences, dropped modifiers, and grammar errors that would make a 3rd grader wince. But when I start sifting through the wreckage of overwrought verbiage and discordant tenses I find a few gems that I read over and over again with great satisfaction.

The beauty of writing is that it is a very forgiving medium to work in. The writer, unlike the sculptor, painter, or woodworker can discard, reassemble and rework caricatures.

Writing my first novel has also been a lot about overcoming my personal insecurities. Since writing has been the only thing in school that I truly excelled at I was always looking for external validation from it. I was terrified that if people didn’t immediately find my prose pithy and delightful that I might suffer a debilitating brain aneurysm and lose my ability to write altogether.

So much of writing the first book was getting over myself and my ego letting go and realizing that people would both love and hate my work.

It’s more than two years and 68,000 words later, and my book has finally come to fruition. Now in a last act of faith I fling it to the public and I am filled with both trepidation and exhilaration as I watch my baby take its first steps in the world.

The initial reader reviews have been exceedingly kind using words like, inspiring, hilarious and brilliant in its description. For this I breathe a sigh of relief, but I know that other less praising words are likely to be used as well and I’ve learned to be okay with that.

So get that novel out of you even if is terrible. At least it will give you the opportunity to slay that monster within.

Copyright 2003 Palmer Owyoung. All rights reserved.

Palmer’s first novel Halcyon Daze will be in wide release in June 2003. It is currently available on Amazon and BarnesandNoble.com and through his website http://www.palmerowyoung.com. He is originally from San Francisco and currently resides in Singapore.

Reprinted from Writers Net http://www.writers.net


BARNES & NOBLE BOOKSELLERS

7700 W. Northwest Highway, Suite 300
Dallas, Texas 75225
(214) 739-1124

Please join us for the following upcoming writing events: (All events are free & open to the public. For more information, please contact: Maureen Boyd, Community Relations Manager, at (214) 739-3643 or crm2884@bn.com).

Sunday, March 14th at 1:00 pm:
Noble Generation Workshop led by Steve Neubauer of WordWright.biz

 Steve Neubauer will give a workshop on writing true short stories. This discussion will be geared toward senior citizens who are interested in entering their short story about the Great Depression, World War II, the 1950’s or the 1960’s into The Noble Generation II, a book project sponsored by Barnes & Noble, The Texas Department on Aging and WordWright.biz. To learn more, attend this informative workshop.

Tuesday, March 30th at 7:00 pm:
Writers Anonymous Workshop led by Bonnie Franke, Ph.D

Dr. Bonnie Franke will lead this brand-new monthly workshop for writers. Topics covered will vary from month to month, but will include getting started, the importance of editing, types of publishing and more. Bring your current work to read aloud and discuss with the group. This workshop is appropriate for writers of all skill levels.

Saturday, April 10th at 1:00 pm:
 Paula LaRocque, The Book on Writing

Award-winning columnist and author of Championship Writing, Paula LaRocque, will discuss her latest, The Book on Writing: The Ultimate Guide to Writing Well. Bring questions and prepare for an enlightening discussion with writing coach Paula LaRocque.

Saturday, April 17th at 1:30 pm:
Editing 10-Steps Workshop

Dr. Bonnie Franke will present the “Editing 10-Steps” workshop this afternoon. An editor by trade, Franke will discuss the importance of editing at all stages of writing and she will outline the most important editing tips for writers.

From:Maureen Boyd
Community Relations Manager
Barnes & Noble - Lincoln Park


Texas Conferences and Events 

March 17-20, 2004, San Antonio, TLA Conference, Texas Library Association http://www.txla.org/conference/conf.html

March 20, 2004, Plano, Plano Book Festival for Adult Literacy. Contact: Debbie Frick Phone: 972-839-9529 djfrick@comcast.net Authors may check out details about the book festival at http://www.planobookfestival.com/ Deadline for author registration is Dec. 31, 2003. Click here for application.

March 25 - 28, Denton, TX, Texas Storytelling Festival, Contact: Tejas Storytelling Association at 940-387-8336 http://www.tejasstorytelling.com/

March 2004, Date TBA, Alpine. Texas Cowboy Poetry Gathering. Contact J.J. Tucker at 915-837-1071 http://www.cowboypoetry.org/

April 17, 2004, Denton, Texas, 4th Annual North Texas Book Festival) from 9 am till 4 pm at the Civic Center. Visit the NTBF website www.ntbf.org for a registration form. Booth fees are slightly higher this year, but percentage of sales is being eliminated. Contact: mailto:cwood@tattersallpub.com

April 24-25, 2004 , Little Rock, Arkansas Literary Festival, http://arkansasliteracy.org/literary_fest.html

May 1-2, 2004, Houston, Houston Festival of Books. Location TBA in January 04

From the Texas Author’s Coalition, Inc website. URL in listing below.


On-Line Writers resources

Author's Network-for writers about writing based in Europe, but interesting- http://www.author-network.com/
Copyright Forms-
http://www.loc.gov/copyright/forms/
Dallas Sceen Writers- http://www.dallasscreenwriters.com/
Denton Public Library - http://www.cityofdenton.com/pages/library.cfm
National Association of Women Writers - http://www.naww.org
New Writer's Market
http://hge.members.atlantic.net/
Para Publishing Website - a good writing, publishing, and promotion source - http://parapub.com/getpage.cfm?file=/homepage.html&user=#user
Preditors and Editors-a resources to check out agents and publishers
http://www.anotherealm.com/prededitors/
Society of Children's Writers and Illustrators http://www.scbwi.org/
Texas Coalition of Authors, Inc. http://www.texasauthors.org/
The Novelist's Workshop-essays and advice on how to publish your book- http://www.monash.com/writers.html
Writer's Exchange http://www.writers-exchange.com/epublishing/
Writer's Market http://www.writersmarket.com/index_ns.asp
Writers Net-source for information for writers, editors, agents, and publishers- http://www.writers.net
Writing-World.Com - http://www.writing-world.com 
The Zuzu's Petals Literary Resource Homepage-for both writers and poets- http://www.zuzu.com/

There are multitudes of writing resources available on the Internet. Go to any search engine and ask for writer's resources, writer's markets, writer's contests, writer's conferences, etc


DWL OFFICERS:

President       Joni Latham ( joni1957@verizon.net) - 940/243-5200
Vice President  June Powell - 940/565-1013
Treasurer       Joseph Marino
Newsletter      George Avera (
gavera@chatter.com) - 940/382-8161