Tag Archives: writer

Foundations in Time

PaulaHeadshot2015It’s an absolute delight to introduce our second ‘Write Time’ guest blogger. Paula Vince is an award winning Australian author, whose novels continue to inspire and challenge. Paula writes not only to entertain, but through her work she skillfully tackles difficult topics with sensitivity and insight, offering her readers a fresh perspective by enabling them to walk ‘in the shoes’ of her characters. Having been in the writing industry for many years, Paula knows the ‘write times’ well. Let’s welcome her now as she shares wisdom from her journey. Thanks, Paula.

In 1951, a man named Arthur Koestler wrote, ‘A writer’s ambition should be to trade 100 contemporary readers for 10 readers in 10 years time, and for one reader in 100 years.’

If we agree with his premise, we’re being short-sighted when we judge the impact of any book by its immediate public reception, or by what we can ever see, for that matter.

One of the beauties of the written word in the form of stories and wisdom is that it has the potential to keep impacting new readers in time, maybe centuries after its author wrote it. For example, Jane Austen was born in 1775, but started a chain reaction of young woman readers who regard Lizzie Bennett as a role model, and swoon over Mr Darcy. Some of these readers surely haven’t even been born yet.

PickingUpThePiecesAnother ripple effect evident through time is that of influence. Jane Austen strongly admired the writing of Samuel Richardson, Fanny Burney, Maria Edgeworth and Anne Radcliffe. Many contemporary people who love Austen have surely never heard of these long-ago authors, or know very little about them, yet still benefit from whatever Austen took on board from them. She, in turn, became an inspiration for more modern authors, including Virginia Woolf, Fay Weldon and J.K. Rowling. Next in the sequence, these ladies are no doubt influencing, a line of still more modern authors. Some of them surely haven’t even been born yet.Greenfield Legacy

That’s what I love when I hear people refer to the roots of good literature, and encourage us to reach down into them. We may see the woody, physical roots of a tree with our naked eyes, yet the roots of literature are just as real. They are simply formed of more intangible matter, such as time.

In ‘One Year to a Writing Life’, author Susan Tiberghian says, ‘We enter this world on the shoulders of our predecessors, emerging from centuries of thought, reflection, storytelling and dreams. We learn by reading others, by reaching down into our universal roots.’

Best ForgottenI’d like to finish with an equally inspiring thought along the same lines from ‘The Distant Hours’, a novel by Kate Morton. Percy Blythe, one of three sisters who lived in their family castle, reflects how her personal history was built on a lineage of words and ideas. ‘Daddy had said time and again, the family tree was laced together with sentences in place of limbs. Layers of expressed thought had soaked into the soil of the castle gardens, so that poems and plays, prose and political treatises would always whisper to her when she needed them. Ancestors she would never meet, who had lived and died before her birth, left behind them words, words, words, chattering to one another, to her, from beyond the grave, so she was never lonely, never alone.’

It’s an honour to do the same, each in our own small way?

Imogen's ChancePaula Vince is a South Australian author of contemporary, inspirational fiction. She lives in the beautiful Adelaide Hills, with its four distinct seasons, and loves to use her environment as settings for her stories. Her novel, ‘Picking up the Pieces‘ won the religious fiction section of the International Book Awards in 2011, and ‘Best Forgotten‘ was winner of the CALEB prize the same year. She is also one of the four authors of ‘The Greenfield Legacy’, Australia’s first and only collaborated Christian novel. Her most recent novel, ‘Imogen’s Chance’ was published April 2014. For more of Paula’s reflections, you may like to visit her book review blog, The Vince Review where she also interviews other authors.
 

Write Time – A Case of Extremes

I am so excited to be hosting another guest blog series. This time last year, guest bloggers shared inspiring and humorous reflections on their ‘Write Life’ . This year the theme is ‘Write Time’.

As I’ve discovered in life, timing is everything. Time is also one of our most precious commodities. Writing in season, and finding time to make it happen, is a constant juggle. Over the coming weeks we’ll hear from a diverse group of authors as they reflect on this theme. And like me, I’m sure you can’t wait.

JeanetteOHaganWrites250My first guest blogger is one you might know. Jeanette O’Hagan is a gifted author who writes across a diverse range of genres, and she’s had a full-to-overflowing writing year. (While still managing to be superwoman without the cape!)  I could say more, but I think it’s time to hand over to our guest. Thanks Jeanette!

From one extreme to another.

This year my ‘write times’ have seesawed from intense focus to being swallowed up in other tasks. In some ways, it’s the equivalent of kangaroo-hopping down the road (for those of you who remember their first lessons in a car with manual gears).

Five months – just five months of this year did my writing get the my highest priority – in January with the Month of Poetry (over thirty poems written some of which have since been short-listed or achieved an award), in March and April I wrote three short stories for a couple of anthologies, in July it was Camp NaNoWriMo as I dusted off novel 3 and wrote 30,000 words, coming within cooee of finishing my first draft, and November was NaNaWriMo, with another 50,000 words on novel 5.

As the words began to flow during NaNo, I remembered once again why I love writing— it’s fun, exhilarating, entertaining, inspiring.

Let the sea roarSo what about those other months? Family, friends, faith, community— yes all these things take time—but what has really eaten up the hours is other writing related activities. I finished off my writing course (MA) and started another (Year of the Edit). I have been involved in editing, proofing and/or publishing anthologies (to different degrees of involvement)—Another Time Another Place, Let the Sea Roar, Glimpses of Light and Like a Girl. I’ve needed to edit my own stories and follow the suggestions of my crit friends and editors. I’ve attended conferences, festivals and retreats. I’ve taken time to set up my writing as a business and make plans for next year.

Reflecting on 2015 I’ve come to a greater understanding of my writing process:
I work well to deadlines – especially those where I’m accountable to others.
I feel alive when I write and I want this to stay a vital part of my life.

Yet writing a first draft of a story, poem or novel is just the first step in a complex process. If I want to be serious about writing, if I want to write for others as well as for myself— I have to take it to another level and that means learning my craft, networking with other writers, giving back to the community, editing my work, working out how to publish and promote it. I need to factor those times in as well as regular writing times.GOLCover

Family, friends, faith, health, community matter too. If I steal from these areas in my life for too long or too often, I’m likely to crash and burn rather than be in this for the long term.

I need balance.

In hindsight, I don’t think I’ll try to publish two anthologies (plus involvement in three others) in one year again.

Maybe moving forward in kangaroo hops is not a bad thing (especially if you are a kangaroo ‘grin’) but I’d like to smooth out the curves a little. Those other things—learning, networking, editing, publishing—are part of the journey which I also enjoy doing.

As a wise person once said ‘There is a time for everything, and a season for every activity under the heavens.’ Ecclesiastes 3:1 (NIV)

Tied in Pink_JennyJeanette O’Hagan has short stories and poems published (or about to be published) in various anthologies, including Tied in Pink Romance Anthology (profits from the anthology go towards Breast Cancer research); Poetica Christi’s Inner Child; Brio anthology, Another Time Another Place, Let the Sea Roar, Glimpses of Light and Plan Australia’s Like a Girl. She has practiced medicine, studied communication, history and theology and has taught theology. She cares for her school-aged children, has a Masters of Arts (Writing) at Swinburne University and is writing her Akrad’s fantasy fiction series. You can read some of her short fiction here.
You can find her at her Facebook Page or at Goodreads or at JennysThread.com or Jeanette O’Hagan Writes or Twitter.