Have A Pirate-y Holidays!

Filed under: News — joy at 10:41 am on Tuesday, November 28, 2006

December 7 Meeting Cancelled.

Filed under: News — joy at 12:34 pm on Tuesday, November 21, 2006

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!

Our November 16 Meeting

Filed under: News — joy at 1:40 pm on Friday, November 17, 2006
Greetings Word Pirates,For those of you who missed last night’s meeting (and those of you who were there but love summaries), here’s the scoop:

Part 1: The February reading

Are you excited yet? If anyone has special chef or foody friends who would want to donate food for the event, it’s time to butter them up. If anyone has friends who are artists, we’d love to see their work and possibly feature them at the reading. We’re still in the brainstorming stage for the event. At this point, we don’t need any commitments. However, if you know for sure that you don’t want to read, let us know. We don’t want to pressure anyone to read when they are not ready or interested, and we could definitely use help with food, set-up, general crowd mingling and good cheer. By January, we would like to have the line-up decided. One thing: While it is cool to choose not to read, it is not cool to say you will and then cancel. The reading may feature a pirate duel. Details forthcoming.

Part 2: The critique meeting

Dec. 7, our next meeting, will be a critiquing session. You are free to submit any piece you want for this (short story length), but it is a good opportunity to get feedback on the piece for the reading. Please e-mail your story to the group by Saturday, Nov. 25 so we have time to read it and think about it before the meeting. Mention in your e-mail whether or not it is the story you plan to read at the event. Word around the pirate ship was that the last critique was fun and fruitful. We’ll have special snacks!

Part 3: The prompt

The prompt was inspired by Joy’s conversation with someone from On the Page Magazine. Its next issue will feature the theme of “mavericks.” So Joy and I compiled a bunch of sentences using the word maverick. The prompt is to use the sentence in your story. Here are some sentences you can choose from that aren’t already taken:

  • The little brown maverick is winking its eye
  • When the pilot has selected a target, the TV image is “locked” in the missile’s seeker logic, and the Maverick is fired.

  • He had obviously shaved before their date, but a patch of maverick hair remained near his chin and she couldn’t stop looking at it.

  • The maverick is the rarest of all.

  • The Maverick is a sensitive book of urban poetry written …

  • Move over, _________: there’s a new Maverick in town.

  • “Which is tougher: A Maverick or a Coyote?” he asked.

  • That maverick needs some reigning in, he does. Yup.

  • Not a lot of people know that the Maverick surfing contest is named after a dog.

  • You ain’t been on a roller coast until you’ve been on the Maverick.

  • She couldn’t keep their names straight, so she called them all “Maverick” and none of them seemed to mind.


Yay! -Marcia

Comments

Filed under: News — joy at 9:10 am on Monday, November 13, 2006

I am trying comments again. But only as long as WPs say stuff on here.

Why We Do This

Filed under: Fun — joy at 10:31 am on Monday, November 6, 2006

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:

  1. Puts you in the head of an individual in a way that nothing else can. It bridges culture gaps, age differences, and even death. After all, you are literally reading someone else’s thoughts. As such, it teaches you ways of thinking that you would never be able to understand without it. I think you could read the entire history of China and still not understand a particular kind of Chinese thinking the way one single Lu Hsun story could teach you.
  2. Serves as a critique of the world around us. Nothing gets at the problems of our culture and government like art can. The writer is someone who explores the emotional, intellectual, and spiritual impacts of our social systems, which is an essential and important role.
  3. Connects us to each other. Often this comes in emotional connection. You’re reading along, and then suddenly you realize that a character is describing an emotion that you believed only you had experienced. It’s like finding a friend who truly understands you. You are filled with amazement; you feel less alone. But writing also inspires connection through everything from new ideas, innovative language use, and an entertaining story. Language is communication, and communication is what binds people together. Fiction writing is communication distilled down to get at the places where language fails us–those unturned stones of the mind that we know and don’t know about at the same time.

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.