Becoming A Fiction Writer
One girl, one dream … and a whole lot of procrastination
December 4, 2009 by amanda

Flashback to my in-the-closet writing days

I consider that I’ve been a writer basically my whole life (at least, let’s say, since I could read and write – even though my grandmother traces my writing conviction back to age three). But it’s only been a few short years since I’ve admitted to anyone more than my closest circle of people that I am a writer.

These days, with a decent income landing in my bank account from writing, and the beginnings of some success as a fiction writer, I feel I have enough of the trappings to unashamedly admit to being a writer. But I just found a piece I wrote back in March 2001 which was quite different:

I’ve been a closet writer for a long time. Yes, I’d love to be a bestselling, world-famous novelist, but I wouldn’t dare tell anyone. I could never show anybody something I’d written. Would they laugh? Give me a non-committal “that’s nice”? I’m not sure what I expect.

It’s hard now for me to imagine that I was really terrified of even showing just one person something I’d written, but I guess I’m still pretty secretive about showing people parts of my novel, so it’s not so far-fetched. This 2001 piece went on to explain my first experiences with an online writing group:

Discovering creative writing groups on the web started it all. Suddenly, I began thinking, I can practise writing, I can get feedback, and these people will never really know who I am. The first time I submitted a piece of writing to an online writing group, I held my breath as I clicked the mouse to send my baby out to the world. For the next three hours I kept a constant watch on my computer screen for any feedback. Finally, some positive, useful responses arrived, and I was able to go to sleep that night.

Thank goodness for the internet. Being anonymous and often on the other side of the world to people who were reading my writing finally gave me the confidence to give it a go. I’m damn glad I did! If anyone who’s reading this is still at the stage of being too scared to show anybody their writing, then here’s a challenge: send it to me! I’m probably on the other side of the world from you and you won’t be able to see my face while I read it. And the chances are, I’ll like what you write.

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December 1, 2009 by amanda

Antonio’s lesson in story-telling

Antonio with Aussie flag

Back in Germany, I taught English to a lovely Italian student (pictured above with an Aussie flag!) – he spoke Italian and German beautifully, but was a beginner at English. Despite knowing virtually no English grammar and guessing at vocabulary by trying out English-sounding versions of the German and Italian words he knew (quite a successful strategy, actually!), Antonio managed to tel me long stories and keep me entertained for most of our lesson time. Unfortunately that meant his English probably didn’t get much better, but I remember one day he taught me a lesson about writing and story-telling, quite by accident.

At the time, Antonio was planning a holiday in Spain with his family. They would stay at an apartment belonging to a colleague, the same place they had stayed four summers earlier. And he told me that one of his biggest hopes for the trip was that he would find his favourite sunglasses. (Ah – the hook!). “Why?”, I asked, of course. He went on to tell the story (not his exact words …):

Last time I was there, we went to the beach one day when there were big waves. Now, four years ago, my big daughter Viviana was not 12 years old, she was eight. And Vanessa was not nine, she was five. And so we went into the water, and I had one daughter on each hand.

We were jumping in the waves, and then far away I could see that there was a mini tsunami coming. And I didn’t want my daughters to be scared, so I turned them around, so they couldn’t see it. When the wave came, we did a big jump all together. The water washed over the top of my head and then it ran out again. I checked on my left hand, I still had one daughter there, and on the right hand, I had my other daughter. But then I looked up, and something was different. Everything was suddenly very bright.

That’s when I realised my sunglasses had been washed off my head. We looked everywhere but we never found them. But this year when we go back, I think I will find them somewhere on the beach.

Almost anybody else would simply say, “I lost my sunglasses last time when a wave went over the top of me and my daughters”. Antonio did perfect “show, not tell”, he kept me in suspense, and he made me laugh. All that with very little English. When I’m trying to write a good story, I have to remember this and avoid fancy words or complicated sentences – a great story can be told very simply, you just have to tell it in Antonio’s way.

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