Have A Pirate-y Holidays!

Merry Christmas ! You get extra time to work on your piece of the critique because we are cancelling the December 7th meeting. The critique will be on January 4, 2007.
Therefore, please send your piece to be critiqued to the group by December 20th.
If you are working away at your piece for the reading/critique and want feedback, please feel free to e-mail it to the group early.
Happy Thanksgiving Pirates!
Yay! -Marcia
I was originally going to post this on my own blog, but since it was inspired by Word Pirates, I decided to post it here instead. — Joy
I’ve been thinking lately that I ought to have more established ideas about the function of creative writing. Is it to entertain? Communicate? Recreate emotions? All of the above? Chekov thought that the writer serves as an observer of life. Is that what I’m doing? Virginia Woolf thought that writing illuminated the otherwise isolated subjective experience. Do I agree?
Word Pirates is the closest thing I have to my own ideas about writing. Marcia and I generally agree on these issues. For example, we both think that above all, writing shouldn’t be boring. That sounds like a no-brainer, maybe, but you would be shocked by how much is written with no particular thought about being entertaining. And today’s writers are fighting tremendous odds–TV, Internet, short attention spans, et. all. They have to grab the reader right away and hold on tight.
Or, I think we both agree that writing should clearly say something. We want stories, we want a point. We aren’t the type of readers who can slough through a bunch of experimental poetry and feel like we got something out of it. And there are other things: We think short stories should be short, that essays should not be naval gazing, that pop culture is actually important, and that humor is awesome.
As for the deeper aesthetic meaning of art, I don’t think Word Pirates has gotten there yet. However, I do think writing, particularly creative writing, serves several purposes. Writing:
I think, as I write this, that this is my basic opinion of why creative writing is important. But I could be leaving something out. If so, what? I would like to hear your thoughts.