Fiction Writing ~ The Passionate Journey! The Blog of Writing Coach, Emily Hanlon

Thursday, March 31, 2005

Still Procrastinating After All These Years....

Just to let you know you are not alone,
this morning I woke up early to write and
all of a sudden I decided I had to scrub the lime
deposit off the shower floor! And there I was, scrubbing away
at a hated task... and I had to laugh at myself.
So now, I have to take a walk around my garden, feed the birds,
feed myself and then get to my writing!!

And so it goes....

Sunday, March 27, 2005

Update on Writing is the Song of the Soul Series

Last week I said I was starting a new series on the blog called
Writing is the Song of the Soul. Life, however, has gotten in the way with a vengeance -- several things including my daughter's wedding on June 12. The wedding is being held at my house and my garden is the centerpiece (besides the bride and groom, of course!). All this means that much of my free time will be spent in the garden, (no complaints there!) and wedding preparations in general. And since Writing is the Song of the Soul is a series that I have to spend time on, I have decided not to run it now. If something strikes me, I will add it to the blog, but I can't give it the serious consideration required for a while.

However, I will continue blogging on other matters on writing and creativity.

Happy Spring!

A Short Story Contest

From FirstWriter.com

Short story contest – deadline delayed!

The deadline for firstwriter.com's First International Short Story Contest has been delayed by one month to May 1, 2005 to allow for last minute entries.

The competition is seeking short stories up to 3,000 words, and is open to stories on any subject and in any style: literary fiction; genre; romance; horror; science fiction; experimental – all are acceptable and will be treated equally – the only criteria on which they will be judged is the quality of the story and of the writing.

The winner of the competition will receive a cash prize of £200, or the equivalent in your currency (that's over $300). Not only that, but there will also be ten special commendations awarded. All eleven winners will be published in firstwriter.magazine and receive a free annual subscription to firstwriter.com worth $28.49 / £18.99, allowing access to our daily updated databases of over 200 writing competitions, over 600 literary agents, and over 450 magazines.

Another advantage of the firstwriter.com competition is that submissions are made online – saving you the hassle of printing and posting. To enter your story online in seconds go to http://www.firstwriter.com/competitions/short_story_contest/

Monday, March 21, 2005

An Inspiring Story for the Creative Soul

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Sea Gypsies See Signs In The Waves
March 20, 2005

from www.cbsnews.com

The tsunami may have lasted only a couple of hours, but it will not go away. New casualties are still being discovered: Thais, Swedes, Sri Lankans, and Indonesians. The death toll has topped 175,000. And there’s more than 125,000 still missing and presumed dead.

But there’s one group who live precisely where the tsunami hit hardest who suffered no casualties at all. They are the sea gypsies of the Andaman Sea, or as they call themselves, the Moken.

They’ve lived for hundreds of years on the islands off the coast of Thailand and Burma. They are, of all the peoples of the world, among the least touched by modern civilization.

And, as Correspondent Bob Simon reports, they miraculously survived the tsunami because they knew it was coming.
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It’s their intimacy with the sea that saved the Moken. They’re born on the sea, live on the sea, die on the sea. They know its moods and motions better than any marine biologist. They’re nomads, constantly moving from island to island, living more than six months a year on their boats.

At low tide, they collect sea cucumbers, and catch eels. At high tide, they dive for shellfish. They’ve been living this way for so many generations that they’ve become virtually amphibious.

Kids learn to swim before they can walk. Underwater, they can see twice as clearly as the rest of us, and by lowering their heart rate, can stay underwater twice as long. They are truly sea urchins.

60 Minutes discovered a Moken village on an island two hours by speedboat from the coast of Thailand. It had become something of an exotic tourist Mecca before the tsunami.

A Bangkok movie star and amateur photographer named Aun was here on Dec. 26, 2004, taking pictures of Moken village life, when someone noticed the sea receding into the distance.

Aun's pictures showed the Moken on the beach crying. Did she have any idea why they were crying? "I feel like they know what bad will happen," says Aun.

Her pictures also show the Moken fleeing towards higher ground long before the first wave struck. Aun pointed out how high the water first came. And that was just the first wave. The worst was yet to come, and the Moken knew because of signs from the sea.

It wasn’t only the sea that was acting strangely. It was the animals, too. On the mainland, elephants started stampeding toward higher ground. Off Thailand’s coast, divers noticed dozens of dolphins swimming for deeper water. And on these islands, the cicadas, which are usually so loud, suddenly went silent.

Saleh Kalathalay, a skilled spear-fisherman who was on a different part of the island, also noticed the silence. He ran around warning everyone. Did they believe him?

"The young people called me a liar. I said, 'We’ve told the story of the wave since the old times,' but none of the kids believed me," says Kalathalay.

"I grabbed my daughter by the hand and said, 'Child, get out of here, or you’ll die!' She said, 'You’re a liar, father, you’re drunk.' I hadn’t had a drop to drink."

Kalathalay brought the skeptics to the water’s edge, where they, too, saw the signs. Eventually, everyone, the Moken and the tourists, climbed to higher ground and were saved. But there's nothing left in the village.

Why does Kalathalay think the tsunami happened? "The wave is created by the spirit of the sea," says Kalathalay. "The Big Wave had not eaten anyone for a long time, and it wanted to taste them again."

Do the Moken consider themselves unlucky because their village was destroyed, or lucky because they survived?

"I think they just take it as a matter of fact," says Dr. Narumon Hinshiranan, an anthropologist, and one of the very few experts who speak the Moken language.

How did the Moken know that the tsunami was coming? "The water receded very fast and one wave, one small wave, came so they recognized that this is not ordinary," says Hinshiranan. "And then they have this kind of legend that passed from generations to generations about seven waves."

It’s a legend recited around campfires, bearing an astonishing resemblance to what actually happened on Dec. 26, 2004.

They call it the Laboon, the "wave that eats people," and it’s brought on by the angry spirits of the ancestors. Before it comes, the sea recedes. Then the waters flood the earth, destroy it, and make it clean again.

"So basically, the tsunami myth is that the world is reborn after it is covered with water," says Simon. "So, we're back to the Biblical flood."

"Yes," says French anthropologist Jacques Ivanoff, the world’s foremost authority on the Moken. He's been living with them on and off for more than 20 years. 60 Minutes joined him on a voyage of discovery.

Ivanoff was going to the Moken islands off the coast of Burma, a military dictatorship closed to the outside world. There had been no news of what had happened to these Moken since the tsunami.

"We knew that the Moken survived the tsunami, the Moken in Thailand survived," says Simon. "We really don’t know for sure what happened in Burma, do we?"

"Nobody can know, because no information gets out of Burma," says Ivanoff. "Everybody has to say nothing happened. That means the tsunami stopped at the border – that’s it, finished, end of the story."

Ivanoff’s boat, a converted cargo ship called the Moken Queen could have sailed right off the pages of Joseph Conrad. The captain was called “Long Ear,” and the crew was Burmese. The deck was shrouded in nets to keep out malarial mosquitoes.

All sense of time of the 21st century seemed to evaporate into the tropical night air as the boat probed farther and farther into what often seemed to be the heart of darkness.

"You are outside of everywhere. You are nowhere, in fact," says Ivanoff.

At dawn, two Moken boats came out of nowhere. The Moken on the two boats hadn’t seen each other since the tsunami and started exchanging tales of survival. While the Moken off Thailand had been on dry ground, these Moken in Burmese waters had been in their boats, at sea.

"The water had such unbelievable strength," said one Moken man. "It was swirling like a whirlpool as if it was boiling and coming from the depths of the earth."

Like their Thai cousins, these Moken also knew what to do. Since they were at sea, they made for deeper water and were spared. Others, like some Burmese fishermen near them, were not.

"How come they knew something was wrong, and the Burmese fishermen did not," Simon asked the Moken man. "They weren’t Burmese businessmen; they were fishermen. They should know the sea, too."

"They were collecting squid, they were not looking at anything. They saw nothing, they looked at nothing. They don’t know how to look," says the Moken man. "Suddenly, everything rose up, their boats were thrown up in the air. The violence was unbelievable."

A family of Moken was living on a boat on the beach when the Moken Queen got to shore. But during the tsunami, they had also been at sea. Simon started by introducing himself.

Simon: My name is Bob.

Moken man: Bob, Bob, Bob, Bob.

We had come here to find out whether these people had survived the tsunami. We wound up captivated by their culture. We had never seen anything like it.

The Moken don't know how old they are. Ivanoff says this is because, "Time is not the same concept as we have. You can't say for instance, 'When.' It doesn't exist in Moken language."

And Ivanoff says "when" is not the only word missing from the Moken language. "Want" is another. "Yes, you use it very often," says Ivanoff. "Take that out of your language and you see how often you use it. 'I want this, I want that.'"

There is also no word for "take." "You take something," says Ivanoff. "You give or you take. You don't want."

The fact is, the Moken want very little. What they don’t want is to accumulate anything. Baggage is not good for a nomadic people. It ties you down. They have no notion and no desire for wealth.

Is there any other word missing from the Moken language? "No goodbye, no hello," says Ivanoff. "That's quite difficult. Imagine after one year, you live with them, and then you go. You go. That’s it. Finish."

And, there are no greetings. While 60 Minutes was on a Thai Moken island, a flotilla from Burma dropped by. They didn’t seem terribly excited by this. But visits from relatives, and they’re all relatives, happen all the time. And since there is no notion of time, it doesn’t matter if the last visit was a week ago or five years ago. There’s just a constant commingling. And, in the wake of the tsunami, they’re all busy now, rebuilding their boats and their lives.

"What I saw since the tsunami is yes, they take this opportunity to make the strong group stronger," says Ivanoff to Simon. "For instance, you are sitting on his boat."

"Is it OK with him," asks Simon.

"No problem," says Ivanoff. "He wanted to work a bit on the boat, but…"

"But he doesn't mind waiting," asks Simon.

"Of course not," says Ivanoff, who says this is not a problem.

But the Moken do have problems. The Burmese have turned some of their islands into military bases. And the Thais are having them make trinkets for tourists, a trend that could ultimately threaten their way of life far more than any number of tsunamis.

But the Moken don’t seem terribly worried by all this. Perhaps that’s because "worry" is just one more of those words that don’t exist in their language.

Saturday, March 19, 2005

Writing is the Song of the Soul: A New Series

I will be posting on the idea of this: Writing is the Song of the Soul, which is a workshop that I offered for the first time today. And it was wonderful!!

Let me begin by saying that the image of Writing is the Song of the Soul came to me in a completely unconscious way. One day I was going through an old journal and I came upon this:

“Sit, listen, hear the song of your soul. Always there. Always singing. Always waiting. Patient. Until the end of time. You. You. Only one you. Reach in now, through the channel of your art….”

This was my journal. Clearly I had written these words, but I had no memory of them, and my first thought was “Who wrote this?” Its wisdom filled my heart and its gentle guidance calmed me. I knew the words were a glimpse into the true offerings of the Muse and the gift of my writing. I thought, yes, it’s true, I have reached into myself and found myself in unexpected ways through my writing, found truths about myself and my life that would have remained hidden otherwise.

And so the journey began.

It is clear to me now, after a lifetime of writing, that writing is not about language anymore than the image is about the perfectly turned phrase. At first glance though it seems that writing or language drives the image. Nothing can be further from the truth. It is the image that energizes and gives birth to our writing, which is a visceral experience born of a deep longing for authenticity that carries us inward to a self we often do not consciously know. As creative people, we hunger for this self that dances to a song the outer world cannot hear much less understand.

Finding the authentic self, the writer’s true voice, is the journey that of great wonder.


Please let me know if you would like to be emailed of new installments of this series. email me: emily@emilyhanlon.com

Sunday, March 13, 2005

Take out your calender and make a date with a most important person in your life!

I have discovered a truth: there is never enough time. It doesn't matter. What matters most is that you find a time period when you commit to your writing. This time is your own and must be honored... Take out your calendar and look it over... Find two hours of uninterrupted time. Write down your name in pen next to the hours that you have selected on your calendar... what matters is that your commitment begins now!

from The Way of the Woman Writer by Janet Lynn Roseman (Harrington Park Press, 1995)

Saturday, March 12, 2005

For All Writers

Moondance March 2005 Newswww.moondancefilmfestival.com

LAST CHANCECheck out all the festival info, guidelines and entry forms at:www.moondancefilmfestival.com/Sub-Submissions.html

INVITATION TO PARTICIPATE: We cordially invite screenwriters and filmmakers, playwrights, short story writers, TV writers, librettists, film score composers, children's filmmakers & writers, and young (18 & under) filmmakers & screenwriters, radioplay writers, music video filmmakers, and multi-media filmmakers to participate in the film festival competition 2005. Moondance offers everyone a unique opportunity to come together with other writers, directors and producers to create new opportunities, develop tools for success and forge new alliances within the international film and entertainment industry.

MOONDANCE BENEFITS: Here's what you can get by participating in the Moondance: promotion and exposure of your work on an international level; a forum in which to share your knowledge, experience and talents with your peers; an opportunity to network with professional movers and shakers from Hollywood; learn something new and valuable; and get some great pointers on advancing your own entertainment industry career, in this professional, world-class forum. Moondancers are part of an amazing community; a unique collaboration of multi-talented writers and filmmakers.

OUR OBJECTIVE for this competition and film festival is to promote and encourage independent filmmakers, screenwriters and playwrights, and the best work in films, screenplays, stageplays, TV scripts, radioplays, film scores, lyrics, librettos, musical videos, & short stories.

INTERNATIONAL INDUSTRY FORUM: Moondance provides a forum in which those creative, talented & dedicated artists can have the opportunity for their work to be viewed and accepted by the powers that be, within the international film and entertainment community. The Moondance film festival offers everyone a unique opportunity to come together with other writers, directors and producers to create new opportunities, develop tools for success and forge new alliances within the international film and entertainment industry.

INTERNATIONAL PARTICIPANTS at past Moondance film festivals came from the USA, Israel, Australia, Canada, France, UK, Greece, Finland, Iran, South Africa, Norway, Germany, Italy, Uruguay, Brazil, Russia, China, Mexico, France, Japan, Spain, Costa Rica, Turkey, India, Nepal and many other countries.OUR MISSION: Moondance promotes, encourages, educates and rewards non-violent conflict resolution in writing, the theatre arts & film. Moondance also promises to raise awareness of the invaluable contributions of women to the entertainment community.

OUR REPUTATION: We are eager to continue to be one of the most important film festivals in the world by being innovative, risk-taking, and open to new thinking, new concepts, new talent, and new ways of telling stories.

OUR VISION: The long-term vision of the Moondance International Film Festival is to preserve and revitalize our intangible heritage, cultivate creative diversity, develop an intercultural dialogue, and stimulate this creative resource in screenwriting and film. Our mission is to present a vibrant and growing collection of films, screenplays, short stories, stageplays and other writings, which are an ideal means for communication across perceived boundaries of race, culture, age and gender.

The 2005 Moondance Competition Postmark Deadline isApril 1, 2005Check out all the festival info, guidelines and entry forms at:www.moondancefilmfestival.com/Sub-Submissions.html
***Moondance is now affiliated withthe #1 online film and script submission service,www.Withoutabox.com (WAB)

Tuesday, March 08, 2005

Are You Due Royalties from The Author's Registry?

The Authors Registry, the not-for-profit rights clearance and payment organization formed by the Authors Guild, the ASJA, and the Association of Authors' Representatives, has paid more than $3.5 million in royalties to writers since its founding in 1995. Some payees are harder to find (or at least to get a response from) than others, however, and the Registry is now seeking information on about 300 writers for whom it's holding more than $100,000. The list of names of sought authors is viewable on the Registry's website at www.authorsregistry.org.

Please feel free to post and distribute the following press release as you see fit. Thanks for any help you can give provide.
.......................................................................

March 8, 2005
Contact: Terry King
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
212-563-6920
tking@authorsregistry.org

Authors Registry Seeks to Contact Writers, Including Many Academic Authors, Due $100,000 in Royalties

Royalty amounts for photocopy and other uses range from less than $100 to over $1,000
The Authors Registry is seeking help in locating about 300 writers owed more than $100,000 in royalties. The Registry, a not-for-profit clearinghouse established by writers' organizations and literary agents, has been distributing royalty payments to American authors since 1996 and has now paid out more than $3.5 million in photocopying and electronic rights permission fees to writers. These payments come primarily from overseas rights organizations and are collected under blanket license systems in various countries.
In a small percentage of cases, the Registry either has been unable to find current contact information for these individuals, or has written to them and received no response. In some cases, the author is deceased and the current copyright holder is unknown. The Registry has created a list of authors for whom payments are currently being held. This list is available at the Registry's website, www.authorsregistry.org. Payments being held for authors on this list vary in size from under one hundred to several thousand dollars. The majority of the payees are academic authors.
The Registry urges all authors who are not already enrolled to visit our website and examine this list. If your name is on the list, please get in touch with us. If you see the name of any author whose contact details you know, please either contact us or contact the author and ask them to contact us.
The Authors Registry was formed in 1995 by the Authors Guild, the American Society of Journalists and Authors, and the Association of Authors' Representatives. More than 100 literary agencies and three dozen writers' organizations have contributed lists of their clients and members to build the Registry's database of more than 30,000 authors.

Saturday, March 05, 2005

A Question for Fiction Writers

Do you inhabit your characters or
do they inhabit you?

What does the question and its answer mean to you?
How does the question make you feel?

Click "comment" below and let us know...

Wednesday, March 02, 2005

The Story Connection

"We live by stories --our own and those of others, real and imagined. It's how we relate and stay connected on the most personal and intimate level. We need stories, the story process, the maintain our balance and our identity. We don't think of it this way because we don't have to. We just do it. Story, the story process, is the active ingredient in all meaningful social interaction. Believe it or not, it's one of our deepest social needs."

Jerry Cleaver, Immediate Fiction

Tuesday, March 01, 2005

Writers Digest Annual Contest

74th Annual Writer's Digest Writing Competition

More than $30,000 in cash and prizes!
Win a trip to New York City !

GRAND PRIZE: $2,500 cash and an all-expense paid trip to New York City to meet with editors and agents. Writer's Digest will fly you and a guest to The Big Apple, where you'll spend three days and two nights in the publishing capital of the world. While you're there, a Writer's Digest editor will escort you to meet and share your work with four editors or agents! Plus, you'll receive a free Diamond Publishing Package from Outskirts Press.

Entry Deadline: Monday, May 16, 2005..

For entrants paying with a credit card, we will accept manuscripts submitted online. Manuscripts in the script categories must be submitted via regular mail.



Compete and Win in 10 Categories!

Inspirational Writing (Spiritual/Religious)
Article: Memoirs/Personal Essay
Article: Magazine Feature Article
Short Story: Genre
Short Story: Mainstream/Literary
Poetry: Rhyming
Poetry: Non-Rhyming
Script: Stage Play (* submission by mail only)
Script: Television/Movie Script (* submission by mail only)
Children's Fiction
Entry Fee: Poems are $10 for the first entry; $5 for each additional poem submitted in the same online session. All other entries are $15 for the first manuscript; $10 for each additional manuscript submitted in the same online session.

Add $2 per manuscript to all entries postmarked after Monday, May 16, 2005. Entries postmarked after Wednesday, June 01, 2005, will not be accepted.

For complete information go to:
http://www.writersdigest.com/contests/annual/74th/

More places to submit...

These listings are from www.firstwriter.com

New press launches with writing contests

This month has seen the launch of Cinnamon Press – a new press based in North Wales with an innovative publications programme encompassing poetry, nonfiction, and full length fiction. We are open for submissions and currently have two literary competitions with prizes of £100 (poetry) and £500 (fiction) plus contracts for the winners to publish a first novel or first poetry collection.

Full details can be found at cinnamonpress.com.

For details of more than 200 other writing contests, click here



Website seeks articles by writers, for writers

Website seeking articles helpful to experienced freelancers, written by writers for writers, for inclusion in bi-weekly online magazine.
Humour is good. Reprints happily considered (as long as they haven't been published all over the net).
Paste article (350-700 words) and previous publication info in the body of the e-mail message (no attachments) and send to submissions@justmarkets.com

Compensation: $10 via PayPal on publication or three-month subscription to JustMarkets Daily, a $30 value, on acceptance.

Website: www.justmarkets.com


New publisher seeks submissions

Writing Ltd Literary Consultants will be launching their publishing company, with three books, in 2005.
They are now open for submissions and are looking for talented writers with an original style and unique voice. If that sounds like you please do be in touch.
For submissions they would need the first three chapters and a synopsis posting to the address below, and if material needs to be returned it is important to include a stamped addressed envelope.
Send your submissions to:
Keirsten ClarkWriting Ltdhttp://www.writing.co.uk/
SubmissionsWriting LtdNeville HouseWendens AmboEssexCB11 4LB

More places to submit...

This from www.firstwriter.com

New press launches with writing contests
This month has seen the launch of Cinnamon Press – a new press based in North Wales with an innovative publications programme encompassing poetry, nonfiction, and full length fiction. We are open for submissions and currently have two literary competitions with prizes of £100 (poetry) and £500 (fiction) plus contracts for the winners to publish a first novel or first poetry collection.
Full details can be found at cinnamonpress.com.

For details of more than 200 other writing contests, click here

Website seeks articles by writers, for writers
Website seeking articles helpful to experienced freelancers, written by writers for writers, for inclusion in bi-weekly online magazine.
Humour is good. Reprints happily considered (as long as they haven't been published all over the net).

Paste article (350-700 words) and previous publication info in the body of the e-mail message (no attachments) and send to submissions@justmarkets.com

Compensation: $10 via PayPal on publication or three-month subscription to JustMarkets Daily, a $30 value, on acceptance.

New publisher seeks submissions
Writing Ltd Literary Consultants will be launching their publishing company, with three books, in 2005.
They are now open for submissions and are looking for talented writers with an original style and unique voice. If that sounds like you please do be in touch.

For submissions they would need the first three chapters and a synopsis posting to the address below, and if material needs to be returned it is important to include a stamped addressed envelope.

Send your submissions to:
Keirsten ClarkWriting Ltdhttp://www.writing.co.uk/
Website: http://www.justmarkets.com/