Remington Roundup: #Love, #Truth, & a #VeryLargeCat

Woman at typewriter March brings new snow to Wisconsin, a driveway to be shoveled, and (so) a reason for me to get out there in boots and exercise. To warm us up during this final stretch of winter, the March Roundup brings links to love, truth, and a very large cat.

Meow.


#Love

ml-300x211For years, the New York Times has been running a wonderful column on the “joys and tribulations of love.” Now, you can hear actors read chosen essays from the column in a weekly podcast series of Modern Love.

“I have always loved falling.”
~Natalie Lindeman

Here’s a link to the podcast episode of Dakota Fanning reading “The Plunge” by Natalie Lindeman (who, by the way, was seventeen when she was published in Modern Love!).


#Truth

Ellen Urbani, author of LANDFALL (read her Q&A here), has an amazing essay on The Rumpus, “There Is No Such Thing as a True Story,” in which she says “Perspective is a fickle beast, and memory is an unreliable traveling companion through the years.”

“So tell me the truth,” he says. “The whole truth! Don’t leave anything out.”

“Why do you want to know this truth?” I ask.

“Because knowing the truth is the only way to figure out who is lying.”

She writes about the two sides to a story and the strange workings of memory. Go read this if you and someone you know have very different perspectives on a shared experience.


A #VeryLargeCat

I’m cheating here a little with this part of the March roundup, as I’m highlighting a book in print rather than an essay or article online. But if you have kids or you’ve read Katherine Applegate’s THE ONE AND ONLY IVAN (or if you’re keen on cats), you’ll love Applegate’s newest book, CRENSHAW. Crenshaw is a cat. A very big cat. And that’s not the only odd bit about him.

1384631a39c39f20c1f737b5d6ed667cI noticed several weird things about the surfboarding cat. Thing number one: He was a surfboarding cat. Thing number two: He was wearing a T-shirt. It said CAT’S RULE, DOGS DROOL. Thing number three: He was holding a closed umbrella, like he was worried about getting wet. Which, when you think about it, is kind of not the point of surfing.

The cover alone draws me in, and the story is so sweet. I’m reading it with my daughter right now and had to stop myself from turning pages the other evening, it being a school night and all, but I could have swallowed it up in one sitting.

What are you loving this month?

Focus on Story: Intrigue on Page One

dawn-nature-sunset-womanI am terribly introspective most days, but there are moments–plenty–when my attention span runs short. Too much coffee, too many things to do, too short on time for all that “doing,” I have to force myself to slow down.
Take a breath.
Focus.

I don’t want to make myself focus, though, when it comes to reading. I want to dive into story. It’s true that a good book is worth the wait through a slow opening or a few introductory chapters. But a great story, as Lisa Cron says in her book Wired for Story, is marked by a compelling hook from the very beginning:

[W]hat draws us into a story and keeps us there is the firing of our dopamine neurons, signaling that intriguing information is on its way. This means that whether it’s an actual event unfolding, or we meet the protagonist in the midst of an internal quandary, or there’s merely a hint that something’s slightly “off,” on the first page, there has to be a ball already in play. Not the preamble to the ball. The ball itself. . . . and it has to have our complete attention.

Now, I’m not an action-packed kind of reader. If you look through my author interviews, you’ll see I prefer a slow build, a quiet novel. Still, a slow building story doesn’t mean slow-to-intrigue; first lines in these quiet stories can be just as intriguing as in a plot-driven novel. Here are a few of my favorite first lines from past and recent reads:

book-cover-a-reliable-wife“It was bitter cold, the air electric with all that had not happened yet.” ~ from A Reliable Wife by Robert Goolrick.

Have you read this book? Oooh, really good stuff (okay, worst book review ever–“really good stuff”–but suffice it to say this is one of my “I want to write like that some day” books). 


cover“Mama left her red satin shoes in the middle of the road.”
~ from
Saving CeeCee Honeycutt by Beth Hoffman (you can read my interview with Beth HERE).

Another one of my all-time favorites from the first line through the first scene and beyond.


American-Copper-cover“Daily, men descended into the earth, going where no man belonged, taking more than men deserved, their faces wracked with indifference, their hands dirtied with soot from the depths of the mountain.” ~ from American Copper by Shann Ray.

I received an advanced copy of this book, and I knew immediately from this line that I would absolutely love it. Everything about this story is woven into that first line: industry and power, the harm a man may cause, and the scars he leaves behind.

We’ll talk a more about Lisa Cron’s book and story structure in my upcoming online class, Principles & Prompts. Join us if you can. And, consider picking up Wired for Story or one of the three novels mentioned above. American Copper doesn’t come out until November 2015, but it’s definitely a book to claim for your shelves.

What’s your sign of a good story?

Writing, Reading, Drawing

Momma's - 9Summer hit with a flurry of travel, and it’s been difficult to get back into the groove of things now that I’m home.

I could rattle off several anxious reasons why my writing projects sit unattended, but instead I’m letting it go and holding on to the what Jane Hammons shared in her guest post recently, that breaks from writing don’t have to be worrisome.

Sometimes they are necessary and sometimes, as she says, these breaks can function as a creative boost and be just the distraction we need to get back into writing: “as long as I’m moving forward and not settling into [dread or self-loathing or ennui], I’m okay.”

So I write a little.

Excerpts from my day, tiny essays about up north, musings about what the fish must think as we troll across the water in an old pontoon boat with “Foxy Lady” streaming from the speakers. A sound more luring, perhaps, than the glint of a fake minnow that pulls through the water on the end of fishing line.

And I catch up on reading.

IMG_0650Though even my attention here is divided. My nightstand is full of books in play: Louise Erdrich’s Love Medicine, David Arnold’s Mosquitoland, and a book of poems in Anishinaabemowin and English, called Weweni, by Margaret Noodin. Plus, I just downloaded the new Brevity Magazine app, which displays all its recent posts in a cool, easy to browse format.

Then, sometimes, I draw and doodle.

Taking inspiration however it comes.

Momma's - 2“I like my coffee with cream and my literature with optimism.”
~ Abigail Reynolds

What are you writing, reading, or doodling these days?