Wednesday, May 27, 2009



This photo is looking east, up Dexter Avenue from Commerce, in 1906 Montgomery, toward the state capitol. The Dexter Avenue Baptist Church is on the right, at the top of Dexter, not seen in the picture here. Is it my imagination or is that lamp post to the right of the fountain leaning? You can see the electric streetcars. There seem to be a lot of people downtown, so I would guess that this is a Friday or Saturday morning. There is water in the fountain but it's not running.

Friday, May 22, 2009

Bookstores and Libraries


It is amazing to me how helpful people are. Librarians and bookstore owners, in particular, will burn with my same enthusiasm when I ask for help. The other day I called Capitol Book and News in Montgomery, Alabama. I know they carry a lot of regional books. I was looking for books about Montgomery in the early decades of the twentieth century, particularly books with photos showing how the city looked in the twenties and thirties. Research for my third book. Still in the thinking stage, but as I explained what I needed, Cheryl Upchurch, the owner of the bookstore, caught on and suggested several books that might have what I want. She called again a day later to say she had found another one. I don't know how long she'll keep searching, but I love her now.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Back From the Conference

Back from New Orleans, safely, after driving twelve hours through thunderstorms. Tired, but energized and eager, as these conferences always affect me.

Friday Master classes: I first sat in Jess Well's class about writing credible, creative historical fiction. (I am thinking about my next book already, which may return to the civil rights era, or be set in the 1920's-1930's.) First, let me say that Jess Wells is a brilliant writer. If you haven't read The Mandrake Broom, and you are considering historical fiction, you really will enjoy this book. It could be used as a template on how to write historical fiction well. Her class was tremendously helpful regarding research, how to make it come alive in the story, how much is too much, and she provided a gold mine of useful tools.

Next I sat in Ellen Hart's class on the art of revision. Ellen teaches writing, and she is good at it. I took notes. I consider myself the queen of revision, but torturing a good story through endless revision that is not producing a better manuscript also tortures the writer, and Ms. Hart gave detailed instruction on specific goals to be accomplished through revision, so that one is not simply spinning wheels and getting nowhere. (Kelly Smith of Bywater Books asked me to type up my notes on this class, as a means of future torture methods she can perhaps inflict on me and other writers. Let it be known that some editors do have a sadistic streak, which combined with the power they already hold over a writer's lifeblood poured onto paper, is a nasty mix. This is a joke, people!)

Saturday panels: I sat in the audience as Ellen Hart, Anthony Bikula, Jeffrey Round, and Gary Zebrun discussed the mystery novel. Even if you don't write mysteries, there is a lot one can learn from masters of this genre regarding plot and pacing and tension, which all good books need. These writers are also very charming and witty, so it was a delight to hear a group of mystery authors talk about their craft.

Next, I attended a discussion of groundbreaking lesbian literature, which was a look back at the beginning of lesbian fiction, and the panelists were Radclyffe, who has an extensive personal library of many of the early works and is a walking encyclopedia about them, Elana Dykewomon, who wrote a couple of those groundbreaking novels herself, and accepted an award at te conference because of her contribution to the literature, JM Redmann, whose award-winning Mickey Knight series has just added a fifth installment, and the afore-mentioned Ellen Hart, author of 25 books. The panel was moderated by Fay Jacobs who asked some pointed questions, and classics of our body of literature were discussed, and Elana Dykewomon made a poignant and eloquent plea for us not to forget those early writers. We must keep their names and their work in our mouths, she said.

Next I attended a lively debate on art and entertainment in fiction, which was the old, never-resolved argument between popular fiction, genre fiction, and "literary" fiction. Canadian writer Peter Dube spoke most to the point about this, when he said the who proposition is moot, good writing is good writing, whether it is found in erotica, the mysery novel, science fiction, poetry, or in the literary novel. The distinction is, he said, and the other panelists agreed, a false premise. categorizing work is a necessary shorthand for bookstores and readers, so they can find what they want to read easier, but the argument has no place is discussing quality. Jane Austen wrote genre fiction. If she were writing today, you'd find her work in the bookstore next to Danielle Steele. And fifty or a hundred years from now, some of our work may be found in the classic literature section, if we write well enough. It all comes down to the work.

Sunday: I attended a very informative workshop on the art of self promotion, got a ton of helpful information from panelist Michele Karlsberg, a working publicist, on what to do, and what not to do.

Finally, I attended a panel discussion about capturing the past in prose, during which panelists Jess Wells, Justine Saracen, and Jim Duggins totally enthralled me about why they write historical fiction, and why I should too. Lively conversation about combining research with imagination.

I skipped the discussion of the realities of the market in these economic times, by publishers Linda Daniel and Kelly Smith. I didn't want to hear bad news. For that, I have royalty statements.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

I'm Off

Today I leave for New Orleans and the Saints and Sinners conference. I love the place and I love this writer's conference, which serves as a fundraiser for NOAIDS. I'll be meeting with my publishers, Bywater Books, and that's always fun. A writer doesn't normally get many chances to meet face to face with editors and publishers.

I'll also get to meet up with some friends from my Montgomery days who I haven't seen in many years.

I'm excited about some of the panels and workshops, so I thought I'd let you know some of the ones that particularly interest me. Writing Credible Historical Fiction, a master class taught by Jess Wells, who certainly knows what she's doing. The Art of Revision, taught by the extremely talented Ellen Hart, who has written 24 books and won 5 Lambda literary awards, so she ought to know something about this.

There's a panel discussion called Art and Entertainment, delving into the timeless question of literary fiction versus genre writing. There's a panel called Tales of the New Depression, with various publishers, including Kelly Smith of Bywater Books, talking about how thw economy has affected the book market, as well as online vendors who offer used copies for sale right along with new. Not naming names. Mid-Career Blues, with Elana Dykewomon, who has a new book out called Risk, which I highly recommend. A panel discission of the origins of lesbian literature, discissing the sixties and seventies and those great early books and writers that began our canon of literature.

I'll be busy, totally immersed in conversation about books and writing. What could be better? Drinking and talking about books and writing, at the opening and closing receptions, of course.