Writing stories, since I was a kid, was just something I
did. Then, I had kids, life
took over, and I read stories to my children, rather than write my own.
Three years ago, Mandy, from In Mandyland, inspired me get
back to my writing, even if she didn’t know it at the time. Though, I’ve told her since that it was her
own creative writing she shared online that made me want to move some of the
characters parading through my head back onto paper…or my laptop. Her writing brings her characters to life,
always making me feel as if I’m in the room with them while curled up with the
book that writes of their tale.
So, when she asked me to participate in a Writing Process
Blog Tour, of course I said yes!
What am I working on?
If you’ve swung by here in the last year, you may know that
my muse decided to take an extended vacation – an unapproved, extended vacation. With or without my favorite muse, I have
continued to write, albeit mostly offline, rather than on. Thankfully, I'm beginning to see sparks of mojo returning.
I have focused more closely on editing the beginnings of two
novels and slowly adding to them, in an attempt to get back on track. And there is a microfiction/photography
project that I have been toying with for a while now and am finally
beginning to work on.
How does my work differ from others of its genre?
Honestly? I’m not a
fan of labels. I think the minute we use
them, we remove our ability to try or see something new.
And since what I’m working on currently dances in four
different “genres,” I’m glad I don’t subscribe to them. I understand how quickly and easily we human
beings want to slap a label on something and make it easy to define, but
personally, I really don’t want to live in a world where we only look at the
surface. For me, life is rather boring that
way.
Why do I write what I do?
I grew up moving. A
lot. And in each new state, town, school
and/or workplace, new friendships were formed.
Through those encounters, I watched and learned about relationships in a
way that I don’t believe I would have if I had grown up within the same
community all my life (though, if I had, I’m sure I would have learned a lot as
well, just from an entirely different perspective). Consequently, a lot of what I write looks at
the bonds of friendships and the individuals that create them.
How does your writing process work?
It’s the call of a character parading through my head that
leads my fingers to tap a keyboard. That
is inevitably where I begin writing a story, whether that is the actual
beginning, middle, or end of the tale itself.
I suppose that makes me somewhat of a pantser in terms of
just sitting down and writing. Though, I
am finally caving and know I need to embrace outlining to help me get past the
walls I’ve hit with those two novels.
And fortunately, I’ve even learned how to write when the
kidlets are immersed in their own activities three feet from me. Though, editing amongst chaos does not work
for me and for that, my brain needs quiet space to twist the words and hear the
characters on the pages in front of me.
Because, really, just how many voices can my poor brain hear all at
once?
Next Monday, the Writing Process Blog Tour moves on to four
writers I’ve connected with through both ends of the word loving spectrum - an
online writing community (Write on Edge) and an online book club (From Left to Write):
Shelton Keys Dunning is the author of paranormal mystery
novels The Trouble with Henry and Hagatha Kittridge Must Die, along with
several short stories and the blogs Expressions of Talking Leaves on blogger,
and The Scribe, The Quill, and the Secret Notebook on Tumblr.
Eva Greene Wilson is the editor and owner of SocaMom.com, an
award winning website for Caribbean parents.
She has also written and published the children’s book, Anancy’s Family
Reunion.
Shannon Morgan is an editor and a food and travel writer
working on her first novel. Visit her
blog at Shannon Morgan Creative.
Jessica Claire Haney is a writer and mother of two who is working on her first novel. She blogs at Crunchy-Chewy Mama and has two essays published in the recent anthology, Have Milk, Will Travel: Adventures in Breastfeeding.