The Writer’s Next Step: Ready for Action

Jun 18

If I’ve learned one thing in life, it is the value of a good reader. Someone who will read, not just for pleasure, but with a critical eye. Such a reader can help a writer move her work forward with confidence.

I want to be that reader for you.

Over the last 13 years, I’ve honed my skills as a reader and a writer, and I’m ready to share those skills.

I hope you’ll take a look at The Writer’s Next Step page. If there’s anything I can help you with, please ask. And if you know someone who might benefit from taking the Next Step, please share the page with them. Want to know what it is like to work with me? You’ll find some reviews here.

Here’s to the Next Step!

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Ah, France

Jun 17

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Three weeks with my bestie. Three weeks of days filled to their brim with adventure. Three weeks of yummy cheeses and breads and wines. Three weeks of musing and creating. Three weeks of rain and sun and light. Three weeks in France.

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Six

May 18

Maddie looks on

You cannon possess me for I belong to myself
But while we both wish it, I give you that which is mine to give
You cannon command me, for I am a free person
But I shall serve you in those ways you require
and the honeycomb will taste sweeter coming from my hand

I pledge to you that yours will be the name I cry aloud in the night and
the eyes into which I smile in the morning
I pledge to you the first bite of my meat and the first drink from my cup
I pledge to you my living and my dying, each equally in your care
I shall be a shield for your back and you for mine
I shall not slander you, nor you me
I shall honor you above all others, and when we quarrel we shall do so in
private and tell no strangers our grievances

This is my wedding vow to you
This is the marriage of equals.

Six years ago, we vowed to be each other’s shield, to engage in a marriage of equals.

Six years ago, we made the most meaningful promise of our lives.

I am so glad we did.

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Ten on Tuesday: May Edition

Apr 30

Carole asked us to list Ten Things I’m Looking Forward to in May. Easy Peasy.

First, some specific dates:

1. May 2: Last day of classes.

2. May 3-5: My brother and sister who live far away will be in town for the weekend.

3. May 7: Collect final portfolios from students. After that, a grading party, and I’m done teaching for the semester.

4. May 18: Neal and I celebrate our sixth wedding anniversary.

5. May 19-June 6: I visit Sara in France where we will celebrate our 30th year of friendship.

Now, some general lovely things I’m looking forward to in May:

6. I’m going to launch my first e-course. I’ve been working hard to transform my method of finding time to do what I want to do into something that will be useful to you. I can’t wait to share it!

7. Lilacs. Last summer Neal moved our lilac trees to a new, sunnier location, and I expect mounds of flowers this year. They look SO happy with their new homes!

8. Violet jelly. I’m hoping to pick my violets on Wednesday or Friday.

9. Mother’s Day. I haven’t quite decided la façon de célébrer ma mère (I’ve been practicing my French, see?!), but she has had a challenging year and deserves an extra-special day.

10. Did I mention school letting out? And my anniversary? And that adventure ahead of me? Yes. I think May is going to be a lovely month!

What are you looking forward to in May?

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Guest Post: Charlotte Rains Dixon on Connection

Apr 22

I’m so pleased that Charlotte Rains Dixon accepted my invitation to write about her delightful novel and protagonist. You can read my review of the novel here.

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In the first chapter of my just-published novel, Emma Jean’s Bad Behavior, the heroine, novelist Emma Jean Sullivan, has a problem (well, she has several of them, but the others don’t become evident until later on in the book).

Emma Jean realizes she has no friends.

She has family, with whom she has an assortment of affinities, most of them not very close.

She has colleagues.

And she has fans, the grandiose word she uses for her readers.

But Emma Jean has no friends.

And every woman needs friends.  We need friends to meet at Happy Hour for a glass of wine.  To parse confusing knitting patterns.  To talk about men.  To bond over a beloved book.  To discuss the day’s news.

In short, we need friends for a sense of connection.

 So Emma Jean, feeling this lack, sets off on a path to make friends.  (Really, its one friend because she can only come up with a single candidate.) And while her efforts meet with varying degrees of success, what happens over the course of the novel is that Emma Jean finds that missing sense of connection, in totally surprising ways.

And her life changes for the better.

Emma Jean learns what many of us already know—that relationships transform our world.  This simple fact is one reason I love writing and reading women’s fiction.  The genre focuses on relationships, and many women put relationships first in their own lives.  This used to be seen as weakness, but more and more it’s looked at as having the power to transform our world.

In the recent book The Bond, author Lynne McTaggart writes, with well-researched scientific backing, of the power of connection, and maintains that strong relationships are the most important aspect of a harmonious life.  And that achieving a harmonious life is the key to a successful future for this planet.

That’s exactly what Emma Jean learns over the course of the novel: that life is simply better when you’ve got friends.

In writing the novel, I learned to value my friends and family even more.  I’ve probably always been guilty of valuing love in all its forms over anything else in my life (including money) and since going on the journey with Emma Jean, I’ve vowed to no longer feel like this is a weakness.

Instead I believe that by focusing on connection, I—along with all my female brethren—am changing the world.

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Charlotte Rains Dixon mentors creative writers from passionate to published. Charlotte is a free-lance journalist, ghostwriter, and author. She is Director Emeritus and a current mentor at the Writer’s Loft, a certificate writing program at Middle Tennessee State University. She earned her MFA in creative writing from Spalding University and is the author of a dozen books, including The Complete Guide to Writing Successful Fundraising Letters, and Beautiful America’s Oregon Coast. Her fiction has appeared in The Trunk, Santa Fe Writer’s Project, Nameless Grace, andSomerset Studios and her articles have been published in Vogue Knitting, the Oregonian, and Pology, to name a few. Her novel, Emma Jean’s Bad Behavior, was just published. Visit her blog at www.charlotterainsdixon.com, where you can find all kinds of tips and techniques on writing and creativity.

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