By Adele Annesi
Word for Words is by author Adele Annesi. For Adele's website, visit Adele Annesi.
In March — I can’t believe it's May already — I did a seminar/workshop for fiction and nonfiction writers called Write From the Start, on the importance of first paragraphs and the problems that show up there and are most likely to recur throughout a piece of writing. One handout was a bibliography, which I was just reviewing and thinking — wow, it's really important keep this as a living document that gets updated with each new find. Here's a partial list — with descriptions — to get you started.
On Craft:
- Bird by Bird, by Anne Lamott: On the most common problems writers face.
- Ernest Hemingway on Writing, by Ernest Hemingway: Reflections by the author on the promise and pitfalls of the writing life.
- Escaping Into the Open, by Elizabeth Berg: A heart to heart on the writing life and specific challenges.
- First Paragraphs (Handbooks for the Soul), by Donald Newlove: A truly artistic approach to the crafting of first paragraphs. If you get a handle on these principles, they'll serve the entire work.
- Getting into Character, by Brandilyn Collins: A method for in-depth character development.
- Grace is Where I Live, by John Leax: A poet's perspective on the writing life in all its grit and glory.
- How to Get Happily Published, by Judith Appelbaum: The basics of the publishing process.
- Living by Fiction, by Annie Dillard: The importance and relevance of good fiction and storytelling.
- Revision and Self-Editing, by James Scott Bell: A must-have on how to revise and edit.
- The Art of Fiction, by John Gardner: A quintessential work on the art of writing fiction.
- The Forest for the Trees, by Betsy Lerner: An prescriptive of an editor and a literary agent on the ins and outs of the writing, editorial and publishing process.
- The First Five Pages: A Writer's Guide to Staying Out of the Rejection Pile, by Noah Lukeman: A comprehensive guide to all facets of good writing for publication. Just change the perspective to the first five sentences, if not the first five words.
- The Writer's Book of Hope, by Ralph Keyes: A chicken soup perspective on rejection and the writing life.
- Writing Down the Bones, by Natalie Goldberg: A poetic perspective on the challenges and beauty of writing and the writing life.
- Writing the Breakout Novel, by Donald Maass: A must-have by super lit agent Donald Maass for novelists seeking to avoid the endless loop of rejection.
- Writing to Learn, by William Zinsser: A great primer on the symbiotic relationship between learning and writing.
Reference Books:
The Associated Press Stylebook and Libel Manual
The Careful Writer
The Chicago Manual of Style
The Elements of Style
Webster's New World College Dictionary
Webster's New World College Dictionary
This is just a partial list — send along your faves!
Award-winning author and instructor Jamie Cat Callan tells about French secrets to joie de vivre in her latest book Bonjour, Happiness! Elizabeth Bard, author of Lunch in Paris: A Love Story, with Recipes said, "With warmth and sincerity, Callan shares that most precious of French life lessons — when to say 'enough.'" To research her topic, Jamie traveled throughout France, interviewing hundreds of women to find their secrets to living a well-balanced life. In this guest post, she describes the process.
AMA: What's your background?
JCC: I grew up in Connecticut and taught creative writing at Fairfield University, Wesleyan University and the Educational Center for the Arts. My grandmother was French-American, and inspired me to find the secrets to joie de vivre and true happiness.
AMA: Tell me about the new book.
JCC: Bonjour, Happiness! Five Ways to Find Your Joie de Vivre, American Style goes beyond relationship advice and offers a unique brand of whole-life happiness, sharing French women's secrets to finding joy.
AMA: What are some of the particulars you address in the book?
JCC: I describe my journey throughout France and the U.S., meeting with hundreds of women and talking about struggles with weight and body image, accepting middle age, and for me, coping with a new marriage — at age fifty — and rediscovering my French heritage.
AMA: Sounds like fun research. What did you learn during the process?
JCC: I embraced the beauty, mystery and magic of discovering a new culture, a spiritual journey told from the viewpoint of an innocent abroad, someone searching for inspiration, not just from the French, but particularly from French women. As a middle-aged woman living in youth-obsessed America, I looked for French answers to aging gracefully and finding joy in an imperfect body. I'm not so much interested in finding the fountain of youth as I am in finding the fountain of happiness. As Dove's "real beauty" ad campaign suggests, I learned to find the joy of loving my perfectly imperfect self.
AMA: How did the process of discovery play into the writing process, and life in general?
JCC: This is such an excellent question! French Women Don't Sleep Alone was so successful that by the time I began researching Bonjour I felt much clearer about what I wanted to do with this new book. Also, I had met so many great women on my American (as well as French women) book tour, and a lot of their questions and concerns went into the writing of Bonjour. My language skills had improved along the way, so I was able to connect with and interview a lot more women. The more I got to know and become friends with French women, the more I understood my grandmother and her sense of joie de vivre. It was as if these women were bringing her back to me. I would say this was especially true of my French tutor, Madame M. who is very beautiful, very elegant and in some ways a surrogate grandmere to me.
AMA: What an amazing journey. What was the writing process like?
JCC: Here's something that might surprise your readers. The book proposal for Bonjour, Happiness! was originally for a memoir. I wanted to write about my childhood, my grandmother, my experiences in France. However, my very wise editor at Kensington said she wanted another advice book similar to French Women Don't Sleep Alone, but that this new book could use narrative as well as prescriptive. In the end, I wrote a kind of amalgam of memoir and self-help. I blended the genres into something new—I'm not sure what to call it. Maybe literary self-help? Whatever it is, I'm happy with the outcome and readers are responding positively.
For more information on Jamie's amazing writing journey, visit Bonjour, Happiness! Or see her at Jamie Cat Callan. The book is available on Amazon at Bonjour, Happiness! Five Ways to Find Your Joie de Vivre, American Style.