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The Salamander's Quill

~ We hunt the white whale, and we'll no be goin' back!

The Salamander's Quill

Category Archives: Rant

What do I hope to get out of my writing?

15 Sunday Jul 2012

Posted by André J. Powell in Observation, Rant, Reading, Writing

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Holly Lisle, How To Think Sideways, Reading

Though I have posted very little over the last couple of weeks, it is not for lack of writing. I have been brain-deep in Holly Lisle’s “How to Think Sideways” course endeavoring to squeeze as much from my investment as possible. I must say that to do so has required as much dedication, patience and work as any course I took during my college days if not more! And so far, I have learned a lot.

In one of her writing tip newsletters, Holly challenged her students to, “know themselves As A Writer.” The first of two questions she posed to pursue this challenge was a doozey: “What do [you] hope to get out of [your] writing?” I had never really thought about that.

Since I was about nine or 10, I had expressed the desire to write a book. That goal in and of itself was enough to keep me content and journal writing and world building for years. I made no serious differentiation between what it was to write a book and what it meant to publish one until I was significantly older. Up until that point and beyond writing a book, I had never considered what I wanted from my writing.

In a conversation with my wife the other night, I flat out said, “Sometime in the near future, I’d like to quit full-time teaching and write professionally.” This was a bold statement; one that reminded me of the first time I had the guts to say, “I am a writer.” We spent a part of our conversation on what doing so would mean and require and how it might be done. One of my wife’s points had to do with publication. We discussed the merits of short story or essay publication and that, in her opinion, I might need to do that before I tackled selling a book. We came to no conclusions or even agreement, but it was good food for mental chewing and perfect fodder for the above question. While I do not think a career change and publication are a complete answer by any means to what I want get out of my writing, apparently it is two very important facets.

On a very basic level, I suppose I want the prestige of writing and publishing a book, regardless of how well it does monetarily. As a child I saw authors as quasi-divine kami of parchment, ink and idea, who literally worked magic: creating worlds, legends and myths. I wanted, and still want, to be a member of that club.

As with many who have reached the half-century mark and beyond and who admire fantasy and adventure fiction, the urge to do so came after reading Tolkien. I believe I had an advantage over many who have since encountered the modern myth, because prior to reading about Frodo and Middle Earth, I had read The Bible, Le Morte D’Arthur, The Odyssey, The Táin Bó Cúailnge, tales from the Book of Invasions, Ivanhoe and numerous Native American myths (particularly stories of The Sacred Pipe and White Buffalo Calf Woman). Pretty heavy stuff for a ten year old. Some might question this, but let me hasten to point out that in my neck of the woods and at that time, television only had three channels and no 24-hour continuous broadcasting. Stations used to “sign-off” right around midnight. Selections were limited, to say the least, so when I say there was nothing on T.V. worth watching, boys and girls, I mean there was NOTHING on T.V. worth watching. The only alternative, if one’s friends were busy, was reading, which is exactly what I did.

Thus, I came at Tolkien from a distinctly different point-of-view than most modern readers do. The modern mythology that Tolkien created blew me away. The merits or demerits of the plot were not issues I entertained yet, but what I could appreciate due to my reading habits was his depth of background and cultural constructs. I felt like I was reading Beowulf or The Iliad wherein I could sense deeper tales hanging like shadowy backdrops upon which the action took place—the story of Finn in the former and the war of the gods in the later. Poems half written—The Falls of Nimrodel, and the Lay of Gil-Galad—that I could tell were written somewhere in full. It was like a eureka moment for me to think that a modern writer could make myths on par with Gilgamesh or the Icelandic Sagas. I don’t know why I had never entertained such a thought before; I guess I just thought all the cool stuff had been written and now folk wrote books like the Happy Hollisters, The Hardy Boys, Nancy Drew and boring “adult” stuff I wasn’t even remotely interested in. From the moment the Company of the Ring stepped into Moria and Gimli sang part of the Song of Durin,

The world was fair, the mountains tall,
In Elder Days before the fall
Of mighty kings in Nargothrond
And Gondolin, who now beyond
The Western Seas have passed away:
The world was fair in Durin’s Day.

I began imagining my own mythology. The Silmarillion with its elevated style confirmed what I sensed lay behind LotR… what I now found to be just the tip of Tolkien’s mythological ice-berg. It sealed the deal: I would one day create my own mythology and write a book.

RANT WARNING: On a side note, the excitement of The Silmarillion’s publication made Christmas of 1977 particularly merry for me: more maps, more legends. By that time there were more T.V. channels, but thankfully I was hooked on reading and normally sought my entertainment from the page rather than the tube. I want to emphatically state here that I had few problems reading the more elevated style of Tolkien’s posthumous publication as many would-be readers do today. I would argue—and I know I’m going to step on toes here with my assertion, but I will swear upon my life it is true and after having more than 3000 students pass through my classroom over the last 20+ years, I know whereof I speak—I would argue that because I was not raised with television and movies as my primary source of entertainment, I was literate and skilled and critically minded enough to appreciate The Silmarillion for what it was. 30-plus years ago, peers to whom I had introduced the LotR did indeed struggle with the tome. Ultimately they complained that they expected more of the same, another adventure like Frodo’s. A few who had been raised on reading however, did slog through and admitted it made their reading of LotR all the more enjoyable. 20 years ago, students who had read LotR, complained to me that The Silmarillion was just, “…too hard to read…why did [he] make it so hard?” It was the same complaint they leveled against the Bible, the Torah, the Koran, the Greek Myths, the Matter of Britain, 1001 Arabian Nights, The Worm Ouroboros, etc. Today, many of my students complain that the reading of LotR is “…too hard…” to give it a go, that they would rather watch Jackson’s interpretations over and over or read easy YA. As for The Silmarillion? I don’t even mention it anymore. It would be paramount to assigning the Rosetta Stone as literature as far as they are concerned. What has happened since 35 years ago and now? It is so obvious, I will not even mention it here. The willful dumbing-down of society makes me weep especially because so much of it is deliberate ignorance chosen because “it’s too hard” (add the whine) and, mark my words, as a result society will suffer a descent no less deep and no less permanent than that suffered by Rome. The only difference is that ours will be based on illiteracy and the expectation that everything must be easy and rewarding or it is not worth doing.

Thank you, mother! Thank you, thank you, for putting your foot down and forcing me to read Le Morte D’Arthur at age seven, for shoving a book into my hands and shutting off the television! Of all the gifts you gave me, this is the one I treasure most. Rant over.

During the interim between those halcyon days and those I live now, I learned how important the storyteller is. Tolkien had contemporaries who were great mythmakers: C.S.Lewis, E.R.Eddison, and Lord Dunsany. Indeed there were storytellers who preceded Tolkien such as William Morris, the great pre-Raphaelite painter, architect and designer, who had a strong influence on Tolkien with his “prose romances” of which I read The House of Wolfings and The Roots of the Mountains. Howard, Burroughs, Norton, DeCamp, Moorcock, LeGuin, etc., etc. came after, their works impressing me over and over as to the critical role of the storyteller as modern mythmaker. Today the same is true, fantasy or fiction, historical novels or romance, be it stories of female bounty hunters or possession by aliens from a distant star, each requires a good storyteller. I have ever argued that there are no new stories, but there are new storytellers…mythmakers who with their unique voices and wizardry can take well worn archetypes and refurbish them strong and shining. I want to do that too. I find nothing in this world so rewarding or fulfilling, as telling my students a tale that they listen to with rapt attention and are eager to hear the finish of…even staying a few moments after the bell has rung to “hear the rest. The high is incredible. I yearn to tell a good tale, a story people want to read and feel they have not wasted their time in the reading.

At the end of my life, and here in the winter of my time on earth that thought is much more real than it was in my 30s, I suspect I will have far, far less creative successes to feel satisfied with than I will regrets. I do not, however, want this to be one of them. I want to relax into the arms of death content in this at least: that those who mourn my passing will remember me as a good storyteller, a mythmaker, a yarn-spinner…that I did what most folk only talk of: I wrote books and they were good tales. I want to look back and say, “I did it,” not, “I wish I had…”

Thus, “What do I hope to get out of my writing?”:

I hope to create a second career.

I hope to create my own myths and mythology.

I hope to tell good tales and publish them.

I hope to scratch the creative itch.

I hope to give my passing from this life some satisfaction.

What a “Week”

23 Friday Mar 2012

Posted by André J. Powell in Class Room, Rant

≈ Leave a comment

I don’t ever want this blog to turn into a personal journal, but I have to put down some more personal thoughts and rant-mindlessly as I head into the weekend.

What a crazy week!

It started of rather auspiciously with an attack on the writing front from me on my Scion characters. Using an exercise from Kress I began to describe my three main characters from the perspective and biases of their counterparts. That is Hen describing Rain, Rain describing Ink and Ink describing Hen. Though I have not yet made it through all of the trio, I did learn some things about them, their weaknesses, needs and fears. As stated before, I hope this will prove a turning point in my own attitude toward my story—if that’s the direction I choose to jump.

As school, however, things began to turn rather “convoluted,” for lack of a better term. On Monday, in the midst of 1st period Senior English, British Literature, the phone interrupted Macbeth’s three witches cooking up their cauldron full of “…toil and trouble…” It was Mr. L. wanting to know if I would rather my seniors came to him 3rd period or could I just send them over to his class room?

“What?”

“You know, for your department meeting?”

Department meeting? I thought numbly as ice water of memory failure completely stole my voice. Was that today? As soon as the period ended, sure enough, Mrs. S. came in to mind my second period class. What the hell! Must my kids keep getting short shrift with these interruptions?  I threw a hasty outline of my lesson on the board, sent my TA out to tape a crude sign on the door directing 3rd period’s denizens to Mr. L’s room and then took off for my meeting with Admin.

At the meeting I was told that next year due to budget cuts they were cutting a section of seniors and I would be teaching all of them.

“How many juniors are presently enrolled?” I asked.

“XXX” came the reply.

“But…that’s XX more than seniors this year” I pointed out. “And you’re cutting a section? You realize that means all four of my senior sections will have more than 35 students in them? Adding the two sections of sophomore’s I teach that’ll be more than 180 students. Just how am I supposed to maintain that many students, their essays, assignments and research projects, not to mention Senior Portfolio requirements, still cover the same amount of material and number of standards? I can’t physically get through that much paperwork…”

Blah-blah-blah…the conversation deteriorates from there. I knew I was going to end up making the best of it, but such illogic is hard to swallow. You, gentle reader, need not hear the rest of the exchange as Governor Brown’s tax proposal, squeezing blood from a turnip, and the quality of education was discussed. Suffice to know, I was disgusted. Shit, they should have just let me know via email what I was teaching the next year and I could have stayed with my classes and got something useful done.

And I had so much to do. I reviewed it all in my head as I returned to my class an hour and a half later. It was Monday. I had only one full day after today with my charges…Tuesday. I hoped to make the best of it. It was not to be. 20 minutes into my lesson for Sophomore Honors the phone rings again.

“Mr. P. would you escort your students to the cafeteria? The hearing van is here for their annual hearing check.”

Mental blink.

“Can you give me ten minutes?”

“Okay, but don’t wait too long; the line will only grow longer.”

“Cheers” click. The line was long and I lost another part of my day FOR-FRACKING-EVER!

Next came Wednesday Early Release, a district mandated waste of time for collaboration between teachers, staff and department meetings, and an opportunity for students to miss school. Why we couldn’t have had our big Monday meeting during this time is a cosmic mystery that will never be solved. Did I mention loosing a quarter of my seniors to Occupational Olympics? No? Well, Frackin’-A, I did.

Thursday was an Minimum Day as it was Parent-Teacher Conferences. This would consist of two sessions 13:00 to 15:00 and 18:00 to 20:00. Between sessions as Student Council advisor I would be responsible, along with my co-advisors, to prepare and sell tri-tip sandwiches between 16:00 and 18:00.  After tri-tip clean up, the hour commute home, debrief with my wife and pep-talk (she’s trying to quit smoking and I am at her command) and my “daily,” it was 23:00—a long day consider I started it at 04:00.

Today is also an Early Release day and after five hours of sleep I have to amit I need it. Once upon a time P/T Conferences lasted two days with teachers available for two hours in the afternoon of each day. After a few complaints by parents who were at work during the regularly scheduled visiting hours of 13:00 to 15:00…duh! Who thinks this shit up and couldn’t think that was coming?!…it was decided to combine both sessions, but keep the two day early release schedule as teachers like me had been nearly driven crazy by a 12 hour work day plus drive time. I dunno, it doesn’t make much sense to me either; what I do know is that my kids are missing more school even though it seems they are asked to do more. On Thursday I had 1st, 2nd, 4th and 7th. Today I’ll have 1st again (how and where all my other classes get an extra hour is as mysterious to me as the Easter Island heads), 3rd, 6th, and 8th.

WTF!? Are we in the business of teaching or not? Cut the interruptions and given me uninterrupted classes. Stop overloading my classroom—Jez, I only have 33 desks in my room! Remove from the educational equation all the politics and politicians who decide everything “for the people” but have never taught so much as the a-b-c’s. It takes X amount of time to educate X amount of children and consequently X amount of money. If that isn’t in the cards then let’s forego the whole bloody soap opera and put our young people to work in the fields, factories and on the road beds or our nation and at least give them a work ethic. Better odds at life than we’re giving them now!

This afternoon, I’m off to see The Hunger Games. I’m sure there’s some irony in there somewhere. I’m just too tired to see it at the moment.

Fantasy Folk: Frosty Fearful Foolish Foes

20 Sunday Nov 2011

Posted by André J. Powell in NaNoWriMo, Observation, Rant, Writing

≈ Leave a comment

I can’t help but be amazed at the number of wannabe fantasy writers there are. I’m mean, we’re a dime a dozen if the number of posts in the NaNoWriMo fantasy forums are any indication. Cheap. The riff-raff or, at best the middle class of the wannabe writer world. I can picture this giant Statue of Liberty like monument carved in the likeness of J.K.Rowlings: “Give me your wishful, wistful and wannabe unwashed masses yearning to be like me…” How fruitful we are and, oh, how we multiply.

I wonder if it has to do with childhood wonder of that one book which led us to fall in love with the genre. For me, it was Mallory’s Le Morte D’arthur, then Lord of the Rings, then Dune, then Hyboria, blah-blah. Nearly the same path taken by so many others, but with variations additions and/or deletions, I’m sure: a lay over in Wonderland, a brief stay in Castle Brass, a country holiday in Narnia, a stint in Pellucindar.

Maybe it’s party due to the perception that prior experience or background knowledge is unnecessarily. “Come on in, the water’s fine!” As it all comes from the imagination therefore special knowledge about history, science, law, forensics, physiology or growing seasons, how to sew clothes, how far a peterbuilt can  go on a single fueling or the effects of a hollow point on a lathe plaster wall is not required. I mean, it’s all about magic and imagination. So what if I don’t know how a sewer or aqueduct works? It’s my world and I can make it work however I want it to, no prior experience necessary.

Sometimes though, save in a few notable acceptations, I get the feeling that we’re seen as the third class citizens of the writing world. Consider the reaction of fellow wanna-be writers of other genres when they discover  a wannabe writer of the fantasy ilk in their midst. I got this one just the other night at a NaNo write-in.

(indent)“What genre are you writing?”

(indent) “Fantasy/SciFi.”

Pregnant pause.

(indent)“Oh.”

(indent)“Oh.” What? Not, “Oh really? Wow, that’s great. I’m writing a _____ about blah-blah-blah. What is your fantasy about?”

(indent)No. We get “Oh.”

And what is really ironic is that even wannabe fantasy authors offer this same reaction to each other! They act as if they’re upset over, “…another one diluting the genre gene pool” afraid that there’s only so much room.

Ever notice how wannabe fantasy authors love to one up each other? If the conversation ever gets beyond the ‘oh’ phase someone is bound to say, “…that reminds me of the plot from Amazing Fantasy Book, by Amazing Fantasy Writer. It’s just like that.” God, I hate that…particularly because I’m guilty of it! Sometimes I think it’s because we feel a bit less important and so we over compensate. We develop an over inflated sense of ourselves and the originality of our stories that if we tell anyone about them, we run the risk of someone stealing them. Hell, we don’t even need the high Fellowship muckity-mucks to make ourselves feel like low level literary street trash; we do it ourselves just fine thank you very much!   Another one of those ironic, both positive and negative, things unique to the genre is its built-in army, a horde of pre-teen and adolescent barbarians rallying to its standard. Who will damn near read anything (thank you She-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named. Prior to 1997, I thought my students had quite forgotten how to read!) accept classics and think each one they read is “…my favorite book ever…” As a direct result, I can’t count how many 13 year old fantasy scifi ‘authors’ I’ve read about or met since NaNo started.

I guess it makes sense though. 13 year olds, for the most part, don’t have the ‘deep experience’ required by the Fellowship Fiction Folk to write about sophisticated laundry lists and such, so they go where they can just make shit up: fantasy. As suggested above, at first they don’t need anything to tell their stories. I suppose there maybe something to that.

Anyway, it’s time to get back to my own peculiar form of sickness and get my word count up from its presently anemic levels. More than a new manuscript, I must confess, I want the 50% savings on Scrivener for the 50k victory. So, where was I…oh yes.

Once upon a time there was a bunch of elves, dwarves and guys with furry feet who used to be dragon riders but had somehow forgotten about it until a widowed princess emerged unscathed from a smoking conflagration suckling three baby lizards…

Those teeth have got to hurt.

Originally posted in The Salamander’s Quill 1.0 now deleted.

Hurry up and wait…or “A train bound for Nowhere and we have arrived.”

05 Monday Jul 2010

Posted by André J. Powell in Rant

≈ Leave a comment

“Yes, m’lord; my belly hurts!”

Like any other military campaign the writing of Marchers is still in limbo. I finished Finn’s project last night after almost four days of non-stop work. Though it ate up writing days, my product responses were kick-ass and I’ve finished HOL for another term. Will I sign up for Fall? Shrug. We’ll see. It depends on how Marchers is going by the time September ’10 rolls around…if it is going anywhere at all.

I feel like Draco from the Warlord.

I cannot believe how naïve I still am after all these years…all of July to write–what a ridiculous notion. No one told me that it was going to be a working (read “evil-empire-School-District-infected”) vacation, but I guess I should have assumed it after all the silly things that happened last year.

Turns out my first set of seminar in-service trainings begins tomorrow and not day-after-tomorrow as I was told. Why is it that I never seem to get accurate information out at the SD-from-hell? I do not have any of the materials—surprise, I need materials? Why are we paying $425.00 each? For what? No materials? Ah, you see? Naïve. I’ll probably have to go out to the school and see if I can find anyone who can help me get said materials. Then after the seminar its two-day’s break and I’m off to Tahoe for five more 8:00-3:30 working-vacation days. Hey, but for an additional fee, I can go see the sights and use the Olympic sized pool!

Forces of darkness score eight days out of 31. Forces of SNAFU (all military campaigns have them; just ask Gunny) score four days out of 31—and probably another today, so make that five days. So the score so far? 13 for the bad-guys and 18 for the good-guys. To put that into a word-count perspective that’s 39,000 to 54,000…can you say, “loser”?

“But…but…but…” stammers all who most decidedly do NOT understand what it takes to write.

No; fuck you. A 54,000 a 93,000 does not make. It was so over—long before it started.

“Well, with that attitude…”

Again, I say, ‘Fuck you.’ I have waited and worked hard behind the scenes to get ready for this. It is not easy to write while I’m working or trying to (settle the state of our finances for the foreseeable future), so don’t give me this song-and-dance about, “Well…you’d be 54,000 words ahead if you wrote with what time you have. If life gives you lemons make lemonade. Then, maybe next summer…”

I completely understand why people go “postal”. Yeah, but, don’t you get it? Don’t you see? It’s always. “…next summer…” And every summer for nearly 20 years a manuscript has never been finished.  I’m almost 50 years old. How many “…next summers…” you think I got?

My life is such a blade of grass.

This was first posted in the now deleated Marchers of Khaldenthea blog and The Salamander’s Quill 1.0

Today is day one…and we’re marching to no where :-T

01 Thursday Jul 2010

Posted by André J. Powell in Rant

≈ Leave a comment

Originally posted in the now deleted “Marchers of Khaldenthea” blog

July.

A month I had hoped would be without interruptions. What a joke…no, what a lie I believed. On one hand how could I be so naïve as to believe that I would be left alone. My anniversary is today (but I planned that); the 4th of July at A’s (I did not plan that); my birthday is the XXth (but I planned that too); my wife’s vacation is this month (I did not plan that); school–intrusive, despicable, invasive school–requires my presence at a, “How to use your new text book three-day seminar” (something I did not plan—who knew the not-so-old texts books weren’t good enough?) and a five-day seminar to Tahoe to learn how to teach a class I will not be teaching. Well, what of today? Sorry; unforeseen circumstances make the next few days non-Marching days too as I have to finish my Wizarding Culture and Society project (yes, my choice, but one I do not so much mind making—Finn has been very affording and I will honor that trust). Thus, I have lost at least 10 days out of the 30, I had hoped for. That means less 30,000 words.

What cracks me up is how unsympathetic those who are doing the interrupting are. When I told folk I wanted an uninterrupted month and why, they sort of looked at me with a glazed look and said, “oh, that’s nice”, but then proceeded to act like they did not hear what I said. Do they all think I am some sort of super-human? That words simply flow off the pen or through my fingers to the page? Writing is hard work, people; it is not magic and it takes time to do well. I swear, they all think that anything artistic just happens. These are the same folk who are going to ask, “So…did you get your manuscript/novel/writing done?” It is going to be so hard not to resentfully tear into them. No wonder writers have to go to such lengths to get folk to leave them alone and do their thing.

Lord, I hope this blog/journal is not simply a list of daily excuses and I can find time to at least do some of the manuscript. Today’s entry, however, does not bode well.

Well…Finn’s project will not get done here. I am off to expand Wizarding culture and society.

A wanna-be writer and sometime poet trying to live, love and learn as much as I can with the time I have left.

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