|
Joanna Young at Confident Writing has challenged us to write about My Love Affair with Writing. She said:
It started in high school, perhaps my junior or senior year. The high school I attended in a small, rural community had one English teacher for all four grades. She gave our class an assignment to write a short story. My story was a humorous account of a girl trying to introduce her date to her family. I had five siblings, and getting all of them plus my parents (especially my father who was usually working somewhere on the farm) together in one place was a challenge. In my short story, the girl would get a family member or two into the living room, and one of them would disappear before she could find the next one. Eventually the date disappeared … It doesn’t sound very funny now, but the teacher raved about it when she returned my paper with a great big A+ on the top. Then she asked my permission to read the story to every English class. I don’t recall any compliments or comments from other students, but I do remember the students in my class laughing in all the right places when the teacher read the story. At that moment, I felt like a real writer. I never considered writing as a career. In college, I majored in sociology and minored in psychology. I didn’t write any fiction, but I wrote a lot of research papers. I also wrote a lot of letters to my future husband as well as to my family. The first poem I ever wrote - and one of only a handful - was to my future husband on the occasion of our engagement. That poem is handwritten on a card stock picture frame beside my photo used in the engagement announcement in the newspaper, and the photo with the poem, now in fading ink, sits on the headboard of our bed to this day. For the first few years after college and marriage, I don’t remember doing any writing. After I opened my interior landscape company, I wrote a lot of business proposals that generated sales for my business. I also wrote a few articles for national trade journals; those were inspired by both my love of writing and a desire to build my reputation in the industry. Journaling has been part of my life through the years - sometimes every day, other times there have been long periods when I didn’t journal. Throughout my life, I always dreamed of writing “someday.” Then at age 45, I suffered a stroke as a result of a chiropractic manipulation. I knew then that “someday” had arrived. It took a couple of years for me to recover sufficiently to be able to sit at a computer to type, but as soon as I could I started my first novel. Like many first novels, a lot of it was autobiographical about my stroke experience, but I wrote it as a romance. I had been married to my own romantic hero for nearly 25 years at the time and wondered how someone without the kind of support I had could overcome the challenge of a stroke. I joined writers organizations, attended workshops and seminars, participated in a critique group, wrote three novels, and started another novel in the next few years. When my first novel was accepted by a publisher after many rejections, I was so excited I didn’t even look at any other books from that publisher (different from my current publisher). When I did start reading, the errors in the books appalled me. I contacted my editor and pointed out the number of mistakes. Fortunately, instead of being offended, she appreciated my interest. She said they were a new company, and they realized their first few books were poorly edited … and she offered me a job editing them! That experience made me realize I love editing even more than writing. I haven’t written anything new - except journal entries, articles for my church newsletter, and blog posts - for several years. My second novel is scheduled for publication as soon as the publishers are healthy again (the small press is run by a husband and wife and both have had health problems recently). I’m thrilled that it will finally be published, but my greatest joy is helping other writers bring their own books to fruition. A large part of my freelance business involves work for business clients: proposals, industry articles, resumes, brochures, and manuals. My favorite job, though, is working with authors to prepare their manuscripts for publication. A couple of my clients are submitting their work to major publishers, but most self-publish. I like to work with my author clients from the beginning of their project, but usually I get involved when they have a completed manuscript. Most of my clients are better storytellers or subject matter experts than writers, and I love to help make their stories and information better. I make their work sound like them … only better. I edit the work, often doing major revisions (like removing the first four chapters of a novel and incorporating the back story that was pertinent into the book where it was needed). In addition to editing, I offer a wide range of other services: formatting the manuscript for printing, hiring a cover designer and coordinating between the author and the designer, negotiating with a printer, soliciting quotes, writing the back cover blurb, designing and maintaining the author’s Web site and editing the blog, and creating and distributing press releases and other promotional materials. I’ve called myself a book midwife - helping the author to birth his/her book. Maybe I’m more of an author’s assistant - or the author’s right hand. My love affair with writing has had many twists and turns, but the passion is still as strong as the day it began, way back in high school when my words first got a positive reaction from my teacher. Technorati Tags: my love affair with writing, group writing project
20 Comments » |
This is a great post. I love to edit, too, and have a similar job, although I’m not involved in any promotional part of the process. I like your analogy to being a midwife. I’ve compared submitting a manuscript to having someone give your baby a glance, and declaring it anything from extremely ugly to fairly cute.
And, oh, don’t all we want someone to say the baby is beautiful!
Hi Lillie, I’m so glad you were able to take part, I always love reading your accounts of your journeys through life!
I’m doing some editing as part of my work coaching people to write with more confidence and I love that side of it too - it’s very different to writing, but intriguing, interesting, exciting and full of energy. I think of it like giving someone a really great haircut - all to show off their own natural beauty
Thanks again for sharing, you really are an inspirational voice
Joanna
Thanks, Joanna! The haircut analogy is an excellent one.
What a beautiful article — I stumbled it.
Thanks, Matt! You’re such a great Stumbler - I’m trying to follow your lead, but I haven’t developed the habit yet.
Lillie,
Thanks for sharing all that fascinating info about your love affair with writing! It’s a great read! You really are every bit as good a writer as you are an editor!
Sorry I haven’t dropped by lately! I’ve been so busy writing business guides at Work.com that I seem to have little time for anything else! (I’ve even been blogging a bit less often lately because of it.)
I’m sorry I missed Joanna’s writing project. It’s such a wonderful topic–one that would be so easy to draw inspiration from while writing about it.
Take care!
Jeanne
Thanks, Jeanne. I’m sorry you missed the group writing project, too - I would have enjoyed reading about your love affair with writing. But I understand being overwhelmed with work; I’ve been in that situation myself lately. In fact, I just barely got my entry in. Congratulations on the Work.com projects!
Thanks, Lillie!
Just found out that, after writing for Work.com for only a few short weeks, I’m featured in their e-newsletter this week as their “expert of the week.” What a surprise! I certainly didn’t expect that!
About Joanna’s writing project: She chose a great topic! Maybe I’ll write a post on it someday, anyway–even if it is too late for the project.
Don’t work too hard!
Jeanne
Congratulations on being “expert of the week,” Jeanne! I hope the pay is great as well.
And I hope you do write a post on your love affair with writing. I’d love to read it.
Lillie,
Thanks for your congratulations! Minor correction: I wasn’t actually featured in their e-newsletter but in their Weekly Roundup–which I recently found out is totally separate from their newsletter. About the pay: Is it ever really as much as we’d like it to be? There’s definitely something to be said for steady work, though!
Take care!
Jeanne
Congratulations, anyway.
Your work was recognized - that’s the important thing. And steady work is definitely something to be thankful for.
Such a wonderful read…and inspiration!
I’ve written so many things unlike what I thought I would write. I didn’t consider myself a writer during those years where my focus was not on writing, but where I still used my writing skills. Indeed none of my “titles” had the word writer in it.
Yet, there has been much writing in my professional life. I recognize, too, that my writing ability set me apart from others having to write similarly dry documents, policy letters, etc. Due to the nature of the work, these are not showable as samples.
What would you suggest a person wanting to wear the mantle and title of writer do to create samples and verify/validate one’s history/resume when starting in her 40s?
Thanks, Lillie,
Di
Diane,
Your blog is an excellent tool in your portfolio. If your current blog topic is a subject you want to write on, just keep doing what you’re doing. You have a great blog on dieting. If you want to write in another field, you might consider a blog on that topic as well.
Writers are always being told not to write for free, and I certainly don’t think we should give away work for someone else to make money on. However, the exception to this is writing for nonprofit organizations that you support. Depending on the kind of writing you want to do, you can volunteer to write fundraising letters, articles for the newsletter, or other documents. Ask for a byline or permission to use the document as a sample. You will be doing a good deed for a cause you believe in, and you will also be creating clips.
And clips don’t always have to be published. Most of the time, the editor or company just want evidence that you can write well. You can create samples of work to use as clips-just don’t try to make people think those are published if they aren’t. Call them samples of your work.
You can mention the writing you have done in your resume or bio. If the companies would not want it known that part of your work included writing specific kinds of documents, you can use a functional resume, in which you list your experience in a section called Accomplishments or something similar without identifying employers, then list employers separately.
Example:
-Wrote personnel manuals, business proposals, company policy letters to be signed by the CEO, etc.
Include the writing you did for more than one company as a single item so the individual projects aren’t identifiable. Then list the companies you worked for under Employment History.
Or use a bio instead of a resume and just talk about the kind of work you’ve done without identifying jobs. “During a fifteen-year career in the xyz industry, abc wrote personnel manuals, business proposals, and company policy letters signed by the CEO.”
Good luck!
I am really glad I stumbled onto this blog–you make me want to start writing-I mean really writing again. Finding just the right word, rejecting image after image until it says what I want to truly communicate. You have inspired me!
Margo,
I’m glad I helped inspire you to write again. Keep me posted on how you’re doing!
Hi Lillie
I always enjoy your posts about editing and self publishing, so it was a treat to hear how it all started.
Thanks, Yvonne. This was an excellent group writing project.
What a great article. I really enjoyed learning about how your love of writing came about. Keep up the good work!
Thank you, Jason. I appreciate your visits and comments.