Guest Post – Making More Out of Less: Strategies for Writing Flash Fiction by Michael Arnzen

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Flash fiction — typically short-short stories falling under 1500 words (that’s 6 pages of double-spaced manuscript) — is perhaps the most sought-after short story by magazines and online markets,…

Christi Krug‘s insight:

I’m a huge fan of flash fiction. Maybe it’s my short attention span. I always–

What was I saying?

See on fictionvale.com

7 Important Creative Thinking Skills

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We were on a call recently with an extended creative team generating ideas for client videos. During breaks, I found myself jotting down examples of important creative thinking skills the team was …

Christi Krug‘s insight:

Here are some helpful thoughts on creative collaboration, but contrary to the title, this article doesn’t give a wide range of creative thinking skills, just collaborative ones.

 

Collaboration is an important skill for artists and writers, but it is not the only skill. There can be a point of too much teamwork, which can smother independent ideas. There can also be the other extreme: too much independence and isolation, which can starve creativity. 

 

Sometimes it’s hard to know whether it’s time to move inward or outward, but your creative instincts can help you understand the right timing for things. 

See on brainzooming.com

Frustrated Novelist No Good At Describing Hands

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GLOUCESTER, MA—Admitting that he has “absolutely no idea how other authors do it,” novelist Edward Milligan, 46, told reporters Tuesday that he’s just no good at all when it comes to describing people’s hands in his writing.

Christi Krug‘s insight:

We writers need to laugh at ourselves now and then. Especially in all the weirdness of writing a novel.

See on www.theonion.com

Jeff Baker: Portland writer Brian Doyle has four books coming in the next 12 months

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Doyle has three books coming out this year and three more in 2014.

Christi Krug‘s insight:

I have heard Brian Doyle speak several times, read most of his books and perused his essays and poems. I can tell you he is an inspiring human being, not just a fine writer.

He will be our guest at the Wildfire Wednesday readings, Cascade Park Library on October 30.

If you are in the Portland/Vancouver area you will NOT want to miss it.

See on www.oregonlive.com

How to Make Memories of Things That Never Were

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Scientists say they have created a false memory in a mouse, providing detailed clues to how such memories may form in human brains.

Christi Krug‘s insight:

This is fascinating.

 

As a writer of memoir and autobiographical fiction, I’ve noticed something strange. I’m pretty darn sure I have "new memories" of my life which I’ve created in the writing process.

 

There is a rewiring of the brain. This makes it hard to recognize which part of the story comes from the original memory and which part is fiction.

 

It can affect my life in some really cool ways I never suspected. It helps me distance myself from my story so that I feel much better about the past and less responsible for it. I have shed much shame and embarrassment over the past in this way.

 

Also, as a coach as well as a student of writing, I hear many stories about contradictory memories.

 

Family and friends argue about what really happened. Oddly, even writing partners can absorb an experience they read about in the other’s piece, and begin to think of it as their own memory. It’s a sort of unplanned hypnosis.

 

My guess is that, much of the time, when writers have had these experiences, they don’t know it. They are no longer aware of what part of the story their brain has adopted.

 

One thing I try to do, to seperate out the original memory (which even then, is often obscured by gray areas and fiction) from the fictionalized version, is to write the story first, including only what I actually remember.  Then I add another layer, making stuff up.

 

In the end, though, memory and imagination are intertwined. They work in mystery, and affect us deeply. There is great delight in letting our minds do whatever creative thing they need to do, while we enjoy the inventive journey. 

 

Also posted at www.christikrug.net.

See on www.nytimes.com

My Favorite New Writing Resource

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I love people who exude positivity, people who look at the world and see opportunities to grow and learn. That kind of glass-half-full outlook is contagious. Christi Krug, the founder of Wildfire W…

Christi Krug‘s insight:

I love it when people tell me how the book has helped them! Some keep it on their nightstand, others have placed it on the bookshelf next to (eep!) Anne Lamott’s Bird by Bird or even Annie Dillard’s The Writing Life. I’m so honored by this, but here is the purpose of the book: to cheer you on. 

See on laurastanfill.wordpress.com

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