Writing

  • History,  Writing

    Facebook: an excellent resource for writers

    I’ve been joining Facebook groups over the past few months. Not social ones – though I have several of those in my profile as well. No, these are groups that help me with getting into information, photos, old maps, and other images relevant to my genre and areas of writing interest. I’ve been amazed at the plethora of interest groups and the energy of their members to learn, discover, and share. There are some treasures to be found in the posts.

    So I thought I’d share some that I’m finding especially useful. You can search for the group title in Facebook, and some require you to request to join the group, which is easy and painless.

    These are ones relevant to my area of Australian colonial and convict history:

    Pioneer, Convicts Families Research Group

    Third Fleet 1791 Researchers

    Second Fleet 1790 Researchers

    (I’m sure there is a First Fleet Researchers group as well, though this is not relevant to my research right now)

    Vintage Sydney (Australia) Heritage History & Memories

    Australian Family History – Online Records and Resources

    The Convict Stockade

    Parramatta Female Factory Friends

    Historical Novel Society (Australasia)

    Hawkesbury Pioneer Families

    Richmond History Group NSW

     

    If these represent areas of interest or research to you, check them out. Let me know what you find in the comments below.

  • Writing

    Short Story: ‘Zahra’

    ZAHRA                                                                                             by Denise Newton

    “Ma’am, would you please step to one side?” The official was polite but firm. There was no option: Zahra obeyed his directive. She adjusted her headscarf with her free hand. It trembled a little. She tried to hide the hand under a fold in her long jacket. Everything about her – her clothes and her spirit -had become a little creased on the flight from Kabul. She was very tired.

    The official led her behind the bustling immigration area to an interview room. It was quiet inside. Zahra saw four chairs and a desk. There was a large round clock above the desk. The other walls were all white: blank white walls. Another official, dressed in the same uniform as the first, sat on one of the chairs. She indicated that Zahra should sit on the chair facing her. Zahra did so, slipping her hands – both of them shaking now – inside her sleeves. She would not show these people her fear.

    The second official had Zahra’s passport. She leafed through the pages, glancing up once or twice. After several long moments she said, “What is the purpose of your visit to Australia?”
    Zahra replied, carefully as she’d rehearsed “To visit my son.  He is very sick.”
    “And where does he live?”
    “He lives in an apartment in Bankstown.”
    “How long do you plan to stay?”
    “Just one month.” Zahra’s mouth was dry. It was hard to pronounce the English words properly. She must say everything properly. For Hanif’s sake. For her son.

    “Is your son an Australian citizen?” It was the man this time. He’d come to sit near Zahra. He was too close to her.  His knee was touching her thigh. She tried to move back a little in her chair. She wanted to spring to her feet, to run outside and away from these people in the uniforms. But that would mean she would not see Hanif. She had to see Hanif. So she breathed out slowly and answered the man: “No, he is not citizen. He has temporary visa.”

    “How can we be sure that you will return to Afghanistan at the end of the month? That you won’t try to stay here?” The man was frowning at her now. He frightened her. Did he mean to be frightening? Zahra didn’t know.
    “I leave in one month. I see my son, then I leave. I want to nurse my son. He may die…he is sick. Very sick.”

    “I’m sorry, Mrs.Asadi.” The woman stood up .”We cannot verify your visa documentation. We cannot allow you to enter Australia until this is done. You will need to stay in a detention centre until we have checked your credentials.”

    The man took her arm to lead her from the room. Zahra turned her head to look at his face, searching for some understanding or compassion. The man had stopped frowning. His face was blank: it was empty.

  • Life: bits and pieces,  Writing

    The fear of ‘Putting it out there’


    As I work on re-drafting and editing my first draft, I am more conscious of the fear evoked by the thought of eventually putting my work out into the world. I know it’s common to writers, artists and others who work in creative pursuits. I suppose because when we write, compose music, or paint, we put a fair chunk of ourselves into whatever we are creating. It’s natural to be tentative about inviting a response from others.

    In response to that fear, I’m working on making my story the best it can be. And when I’m satisfied I’ve taken it as far as I can on my own,that’s when I’ll invite others to read my work and give me feedback and suggestions. Yikes!

    In the meantime, I can take baby steps in other ways. Submitting short stories to competitions, for example. Reading little pieces at a writer’s group meeting. Posting blogs. It’s all part of the process of putting my writing (and therefore myself) out  there. Small steps. One at a time, each  building on the ones before.

  • Writing

    What I’m starting today: Six month ‘Write Your Novel’ program with Australian Writer’s Centre

    I’m so excited about the magic date of 29th October .. it’s when the online version of the ‘Write Your Novel’ program with the Australian Writers Centre begins. I’ve signed up and I can’t wait to start!

    My motivation is that I have a first draft of a first novel that needs work…and since completing that first draft, I’ve been feeling a little at sea with how to approach what needs doing. This program, suitable for those with a chunk of a first draft or a completed one, will be invaluable for me. To go step by step through a manuscript, working out structural issues, plot development, pacing, character and dialogue; with help from an experienced editor tutor and a group of classmates all doing the same thing – wow.

    Here’s the link to the Australian Writers Centre website about the course if it is something that might interest you:

    https://www.writerscentre.com.au/courses/write-novel-program/

  • Uncategorized,  Writing

    Draft completed!

    This is the printout of my first draft…it’s probably 10,000 words too long and needs a great deal of tender nurturing and care (also known as word whittling, re-writing, re-drafting) to become a second draft, then a third…and so on. Still it is comforting and reassuring to see the pages in front of me. Proof that I didn’t just imagine all those words!

  • History,  Writing

    Where did that word come from?

    I enjoy words and sniffing out the sometimes obscure origins of words and expressions we regularly use, often with little thought as to how and why they come to mean what we think they mean.

    Here’s one for today:

    ‘Canvass’

    Canvass (with the double ‘s’) means to solicit votes or opinions, engage in a political campaign or to examine carefully’. (Macquarie Compact Dictionary, 2017.)

    So why does it look and sound so close to ‘canvas’, with the single ‘s’, which of course refers to a heavy, finely woven cloth – such as tent fabric or sails?

    The answer seems to lie in the fact that both words come from the Latin cannabis (hemp), from which sheets and flags were often made. To canvass once referred to a game, which sometimes doubled as a form of light punishment. It involved a person lying in the centre of a large sheet, and others tossing them around on the stretched out sheet – a bit like modern day games played in a park with parachute silk. From this origin, canvass came to mean ‘to stir up or punish’. Later, that meaning included ‘evaluation by a crowd’ – like ‘running an idea up a flagpole’. Because flags, of course, were also made of canvas- like material.

    So these convoluted shifts in meaning lead us from canvas to canvass. A fun example of the way language weaves its way through time, changing and mutating as it goes.

    Here’s a great website I referred to :

    https://english.stackexchange.com/

  • Writing

    My top three writing spots

    My three top places for writing:

    No 1:  At my desk, on the laptop: I am so lucky to have an office with large windows overlooking a back garden that is either greened up for spring (as it is now) or accented by autumnal tones from the deciduous trees. It’s my favourite spot. I have all my folders and notebooks there so I can spread out, which I need to do frequently.

    No 2:   Outside in the garden: ditto the comments above re the garden. Though it is now disgracefully neglected due to my attention to writing, rather than gardening, in spring it’s all forgiven as the flowering shrubs and perennials just do their thing without my assistance. As the weather warms it’s inviting to sit out under the pergola and write – or dream…

     

     

     

     

    No.3:  In a cafe. I can really only do this using pen and paper – I find the whole laptop thing difficult to wrangle away from my desk at home, though I hope to become better at it. Cafes, I’m sure, are the best places to edit a manuscript.

  • Varuna,  Workshop,  Writing

    Varuna workshop with Michelle de Krester

    My first visit to Varuna, the Writers’ House in Katoomba on Saturday 6th October. Such a thrill to spend an afternoon at this gracious house, a place dedicated to writing and the development of Australian literature. And to participate in a workshop facilitated by Michelle de Krester, twice Miles Franklin Award winner. The workshop was on ‘The Art of the Sentence’. Michelle is knowledgeable, friendly and very encouraging. I felt honoured to meet her.

  • Writing

    Valuable resource for writers: The Creative Penn

    https://www.thecreativepenn.com/

    Joanna Penn is a modern marvel: a ‘creative entrepreneur’, independent and award winning author of both non fiction and fiction. I discovered her through her podcast, The Creative Penn, in which she gives weekly updates on her writing journey, news from the publishing industry, and interviews with all sorts of people who really know what they are talking about: from writing craft tips, to advice on agents, traditional publishing, independent publishing, physical and mental health for creatives…the list goes on. I especially enjoyed her frank acknowledgement of the ‘imposter syndrome’ and discussions about the often crippling self doubt that can plague authors. As a newbie author I relate to that. The podcasts are hosted by Joanna in her lovely west country voice (she hails from Bath, UK) and punctuated by her charming chuckle! I also admire her collaborative approach to others in the writing and publishing worlds – there is never a hint of professional jealousy; rather an eagerness to assist others in their creative pursuits.

    As you’ll see from Joanna’s website, she has many strings to her bow, including speaking engagements, online courses, ebooks and hard copy books on distribution worldwide. As well as writing of course!

    If you are a writer and have not yet discovered Joanna and The Creative Penn, check out her website and podcasts.

  • Writing

    ‘Mountains of Stories’ workshops

    Blue Mountains writers are blessed with resources, people and places to help learn the craft. This year I’ve attended two excellent workshops offered by Blue Mountains Library Services, and facilitated by local best selling author Julian Leatherdale. There’s a third workshop coming up in November: anyone want to join me?

    Mountains of Stories – Creative Writing Workshop at Springwood Library with Lisa Chaplin

    Sat Nov 10th 10:00am – 3:00pm
    Blue Mountains Theatre and Community Hub, 104 Macquarie Rd, Springwood NSW 2777, Australia

    Lisa’s Workshop will cover how to create characters, bring them to life and how to keep them true to themselves as well as how to create a precise and professional pitch that encapsulates your book and helps you ‘sell’ it to publishers.

    https://library.bmcc.nsw.gov.au