Write-a-thon: for CW and for me

It’s time for the Clarion West Write-a-thon. That means it’s time for me to step up with some writing goals and ask for your sponsorship.

More about that in a minute. First, for those who haven’t heard me talk about the Write-a-thon, here’s the scoop. I am the Board Chair of Clarion West, one of the world’s most highly regarded and prestigious workshops for emerging writers of speculative fiction, taught by the best writers and editors in the field (this year Mary Rosenblum, Stephen Graham Jones, George R.R. Martin, Connie Willis, Kelly Link and Gavin Grant, and Chuck Palahniuk). Six weeks every summer that open the door to artistic transformation and professional careers. Six weeks that change lives.

We are a nonprofit organization. The Write-a-thon is our biggest fundraising event of the year. It’s a six-week writing marathon, like a walk-a-thon with words or a bike ride for cancer. Writers sign up and set goals, and then recruit sponsors. The sponsor makes a donation to Clarion West. The writer writes.

Last year, I was determined to raise the profile of the Write-a-thon, and I took a highwire approach. My sponsors gave me writing prompts; I wrote a piece of fiction to a prompt, and published it, every day of the Write-a-thon. 41 days of writing. Much of it very good.

It mattered to me. I’ll tell you why in a minute. But bear with me. Here is one of those prompted pieces. It isn’t the best of all the stories, but it’s the best one for this conversation.
 


 
Everyday Magic

Serena loved Open Mike nights: the everyday magic of music on the tiny stage of her sidestreet neighborhood joint, the way people settled in over beer and brats and cheered each other on. Her regulars were folks on their way home from the jay-oh-bee, community college study groups, young marrieds whose date-night budgets didn’t stretch to taxi fares, old-timers whose wives were dead or fled. A lot of them couldn’t sing worth a damn, which they’d all learned the hard way during the six-month stint of Karoake Hell before Serena sold the gear on eBay. But that wasn’t the same as making music together.

And tonight it looked like they might have some new voices. The couple at table five who were on their second round of vodka slammers, both wearing the classic Open Mike look, the mix of I cannot wait to blow you all away and Oh jesus fuck please someone shoot me now. The man in his seventies at the bar who put his name down when he thought no one was watching. And maybe the guy at table two. He wasn’t an easy read: the well-traveled guitar case against the wall didn’t jibe with the fresh careful haircut, or the boxed-in look in his eye. He drank his beer slowly, and by the time he was was near the bottom he still hadn’t put his name on the list. He looked like he was so far down his own rabbit hole that he might not even remember it was Open Mike, in spite of the banners over the stage and the adrenaline in the air.

When it was time, Serena stepped up on stage to applause and a wolf whistle from Bernie Ellison, who was still trying to get lucky one day. “Welcome to Open Mike at Layla’s,” she said. “All performers get a round on the house. One song to a customer. Let’s make some real music tonight!”

First up was Lamont Miller, freshly-showered from his construction job, his guitar like a toy in his big hands, singing another one of his unexpectedly delicate folk songs. This one was about a green river in a canyon, an eagle overhead. Lamont, soaring.

As the applause was dying, Bernie called from the back, “That was real good, Lamont, especially the part about the fish.” The couple at five looked startled, and then peered at Serena as if they expected her to shut Bernie down. She gave them a reassuring smile: it always took new folks a while to figure out that audience was a verb at Layla’s.

“Lamont, come on over and get yourself a beer,” she said. “You did good.”

Billie Mae Turcott stepped up with her ever-more-buzzy electric guitar. Punk wasn’t really Serena’s thing, but Billie was so passionate, and she was getting better at staying on the beat; and with every song, she brought a little more Billie Mae and a little less recycled Siouxsie Sioux. She took a Cosmo from Serena and high-fived her way back to her seat. Serena saw the guy at two frown a little: but she wasn’t that good.

The couple climbed on stage. “We’re real excited to be at Layla’s,” the woman said, as she checked the tuning on her acoustic. They called themselves Spider Bob and TJ, and they fulfilled the terrible promise of their names with squeaky voices and off-key harmonies. But theirs was a love song, and their glow touched everyone in the room. “Y’all just married?” someone called from the back, and Spider Bob blushed desperately and nodded while everybody cheered.

The old man was next. “I’ve heard about this place,” he said in a low and fragile voice: then he sang an aching a capella rendition of “Danny Boy” that had them all in tears, and Serena knew without being told, the way she sometimes did when the music and musician were particularly true to each other, that his wife had died in his arms in Intensive Care two nights before. It was all there in his music. He got a hug from everyone between him and the Jack Daniels that Serena had waiting on the bar.

She felt a touch at her elbow. The guy from table two said, “Can I still sign up?”

“You’re next,” she said, and waved him up to the stage.

As soon as his fingers touched the strings, as soon as he opened his mouth, Serena knew he and music were in one of those passionate long-term relationships, that they rode and rolled each other like a rollercoaster. He played clear and strong and true, and what he played made Serena shake her head as she drew a beer: a heartbroken it’s-all-over song. A breakup song. By the time he finished, Spider Bob and TJ were clutching each other’s hands and sniffling. He let the last chord die. He gave the crowd a thousand-yard stare. He said, “Thank you very much,” held his guitar for a moment, and then leaned over to put it away.

“Don’t you dare,” Serena said. He jerked, and blinked in her direction. “Don’t you dare come to my Open Mike with all that music inside you and then tell it goodbye. Not on our watch. Oh, please,” she added at his look of shock, and jerked her chin at the haircut. “What, you got a real job?”

He nodded slowly.

“Well, boohoo for you, big guy. All these people have real jobs, and they still make real music.”

“I just–”

“You just nothing,” she said. “You promise me right now that you are getting your ass back here next Tuesday to play, and nobody gives a damn about your presentation deadlines. You got that?”

He stared at her. Finally he said, “What is this place?”

“This is Layla’s,” she said. “Open Mike, every Tuesday. Come make music.”

“Shit,” he said. “Okay.” And Serena handed him the beer, and everyone cheered. He nodded, and drank, and she knew he felt it. They all did. A little everyday magic.
 


 

And now we come to the point. I am asking you to help me find my everyday magic.

Last year, I walked a wire in public for Clarion West. And I did it for me, too. I did it to stretch toward a vision of myself and my work that I thought perhaps was impossible to reach. I did it because I finally had to find out if I’m really a writer. Not an author: I am one of those. Not someone who has written beautiful words, been praised, won prizes: done that too. But am I, today, right now, capable of being the writer I want to be?

Last year I found my yes. Many of you helped me with that by sponsoring those works, and I am forever grateful.

But I am not being the writer I want to be. I am writing, a lot. Mostly screenwriting, and also building towards some new fiction. But I am losing the time war: I am slowly but surely giving ground to a thousand responsibilities and other challenges of my life right now. I’m doing my best to find the balance. But I need more help to sustain it.

Nicola is the best partner, editor, cheerleader and wellspring of love and support that any writer can have. But I need to know that my writing matters to people who don’t wear my ring. Right now, I need my Layla’s.

I commit to write on one of my projects every day for the six weeks of the Write-a-thon. I commit to write something good every single day. I won’t be doing flash fiction on my blog — I’ll be working on long-term projects that are deeply important to me. I won’t be walking the highwire in public, but I guarantee I will be doing so in private.

And I will take my sponsors on that journey with me. Every week, I will send my sponsors an email talking about my process that week. What I accomplished. My struggles and successes. The writing challenges and the aha! moments. What I’m thinking about as a writer. Whether I’m finding the balance, and how. This writer’s life.

If you support me by donating to Clarion West, you are not only helping a wonderful organization — you are helping me. You are telling me that it matters to you whether I show up in spite of whatever is going on in my life. That it matters to you whether I write.

You’ll be giving me some everyday magic.

Thanks.

CW 5: Drive

I wrote this today as part of my commitment to the Clarion West Write-a-thon. A dedication means that person sponsored it by donating to CW, and then provided me a writing prompt that sparked the piece. If you would like something written especially for you, please consider sponsoring me.

Here’s all the work of the 41 days. You’ll also find these pieces cross-posted at Sterling Editing as incentive for writers to practice their editing and story-building skills.

Enjoy.


Drive

for Jude Berg. Thank you for your friendship and support.

Madeline is driving to her lover, and even now, Maddy loves to drive. Not the motorway parking lot, not the commuter creep; certainly not all those red lights. Red is for stop. Driving is for go go go.

She is driving to Lizzie. She has a bottle of water and a go-cup of coffee in the holder. She’s jacked on the starch of road food and the fear that her soul connection to a woman 500 miles away is fraying fast, and all she can do is drive. Give herself to the road, to the big blue hand of day, the huge dark mouth of night, the machine and the music, the journey and the destination.

Lizzie is the end of the road.

Don’t go, she said when Lizzie got the job. But Lizzie had seen more than a path opening before her: she had seen a racetrack, and Lizzie loved to move fast.

I’ll go with you, Maddy said when Lizzie planned the move. But that wasn’t Lizzie’s style. The company’s temporary apartment was so small. All her energy would be in navigating those first important weeks, getting up to speed. We’ve got email. We’ve got Skype. We’ve got instant messaging, Mads, we can reach each other anytime. You won’t even know I’m gone.

“At least let me drive you,” Maddy said when she had given up the hope of everything else, when she felt dull with confusion.

Lizzie laughed. “Flying is faster.”

“By the time you get the taxi to the airport, and go through security, and wait to board, and sit out the weather delays, and fly there, and collect your bags, and get a rental car, and find your way to the new place….” We could drive there, she would have finished, but Lizzie’s face was zipped closed over impatience and anger, the same way her bag was zipped over all her favorite things. And Lizzie was going going gone.

If only she had let Mads drive.

All of Lizzie’s promises. Going going gone. Emails short on detail and shorter in tone. The wrong schedule for Skype, too tired to talk. Instant turned into farther and farther between.

All of Lizzie’s fucking red lights.

But Mads is in her car now, and all the lights are green. She’s got her edge back. It’s in the bag.

Because there are things you can only do in person.

Love.

Rage.

CW 2: The Pre-Brunch Special

I wrote this today as part of my commitment to the Clarion West Write-a-thon. A dedication means that person sponsored it by donating to CW, and then provided me a writing prompt that sparked the piece. If you would like something written especially for you, please consider sponsoring me.

Here’s all the work of the 41 days. You’ll also find these pieces cross-posted at Sterling Editing as incentive for writers to practice their editing and story-building skills.

Enjoy.


The Pre-Brunch Special

for Jennifer Durham. Thank you for your friendship and support.

Sandy Gustafson lost his faith the day he met Jesus.

It happened during the 10 AM service, which Sandy laughingly advertised as the Pre-Brunch Special: get right with God and still make your 11:30 reservation. Episcopalians liked to have their needs respected.

He was winding up his sermon on Surrendering to God’s Higher Purpose, right on time and with his usual flair. Sandy had gone to the circus every summer as a boy and spent his childhood yearning to be a ringmaster: 35 years later, looking out at the restive crowd, knowing that if their group-mind could talk it would be saying I believe in God and I believe he wants me to eat Eggs Benedict now, he raised his hand; their hungry gazes turned as one to the blue-and-green leaded glass windows, and he knew their imaginations turned to heaven. In these moments every week, Sandy made his childhood dream come true; he had just needed to learn that the Christians were the lions.

And having learned that, he trained them well. Souls were saved by the dozen in Monroe Corners. He was saving a few more right now, including, he hoped, whoever had just come so late into the back of the church.

“Surrender!” Sandy said, his finger pointing toward God, his voice like a bright brass horn.

“You first,” someone answered in a voice that was not loud or bright, a quiet voice that thundered through his bones and flashed like lightning along every nerve from his scalp to his toes. The voice made him hungry for a never-ending breath of fresh air, for a hug that no one stepped away from first, for time to listen to every word of everyone’s story in the room. You first, the voice said again, like a breeze so light it would not stir a grain of sand.

Sandy realized that no one else had heard it. The congregation were waiting blank-faced for him to get to the point.

The point stood at the back of the church. The point walked up the aisle. She was a 10-year-old Vietnamese girl in purple jeans and a Violent Femmes t-shirt. The shirt was adult-sized, and hung like a sack to her knees. She carried a Barbie doll.

She stopped in front of the steps leading to the altar and looked up at him. She gave him a brilliant smile. “Anytime you’re ready,” Jesus said.

CW 1: The Far West

I wrote this today as part of my commitment to the Clarion West Write-a-thon. A dedication means that person sponsored it by donating to CW, and then provided me a writing prompt that sparked the piece. If you would like something written especially for you, please consider sponsoring me.

Here’s all the work of the 41 days. You’ll also find these pieces cross-posted at Sterling Editing as incentive for writers to practice their editing and story-building skills.

Enjoy.


The Far West

for Sharon Woodbury. I love you, Mum.

Great and terrible things come from the Far West; great and terrible things flock to it. The road through the desert brings them all past the Last Chance for Whatever, where Beth Harvey sells gasoline and milk, men’s ties, dog whistles, a selection of stuffed animals, sometimes herself. “The sign says Whatever, Lucas,” she told me once. “People need what they need.”

There’s a snow shovel in the hardware section. “It’s the desert,” I said once, a long time ago. “What does anyone need that for?”

She shrugged. “Works on sand, too,” was all she said. I didn’t get it at the time. Now, of course, I know the point of a snow shovel. It is not made sharp for digging down into a thing; it is made flat to push aside whatever’s in your way. The snow shovel is a tool to keep things moving.

Most every day, I sit at one of the three small cafe tables near the picture window. I drink a bottle of Bud and maybe eat one of Beth’s egg salad sandwiches, and I watch the road and what goes by on it. Sometimes I see things that make me want another bottle, that make me want to count my dead soldiers by sixes rather than singles; but after what happened that one time, I have never opened the cooler more than once on any given day. I won’t tell you what happened that day, not yet, but I will say that most great and terrible things are not obvious monsters or demons or gods. They are people who are trying to move something out of their way so they can get to another place, and will do whatever they must to make that happen. That is when people become great and terrible; when they know exactly what they need.

Some places are small. Some places are green and smell of springwater and secrets. Some places are a whirl of neon and human noise. The Far West is none of those things. The Far West is every dream you ever had of sky and ancient stone and silence, of possibility, of finally, finally finding someplace big enough for all the things you ever want to be. The Far West is the place of greatest pain you can imagine, where people dash each other down to the bedrock and wet their cereal with their children’s blood. People crawl across burning sand to reach it. People chew their own hearts out to escape it, and then they spend years finding their way back; because the Far West is never the same place twice. And that’s the power and the pull: once you get these notions into your heart or head, they muscle all your sensible self out of the way. And then things might get great, or terrible.

On the day I won’t tell you about yet, Beth was in the storeroom and I was drinking my beer. The road and the desert and the sky were empty of everything except sun and the sense of waiting that sometimes comes upon the land. Something is coming. Then I heard a small engine, and saw a motorscooter buzzing in from the West. A man drove; a woman held on behind him, her hair streaming hot and dusty, her eyes bright with sun. She was beautiful. One of the great ones.

Nicola says…

… that if I can raise $2,000 for Clarion West in the Write-a-thon, she just might do some naked writing too! (No, not that kind of naked, office chairs are not that comfortable…)

She is fabulous. And so is everyone who has pledged so far to support Clarion West by sponsoring me. You all rock, and I appreciate you. I hope lots of other folks will join in the fun these next few weeks.

Enjoy your day.

41 days of writing. Want a piece of that?

The Clarion West Writers Workshop Write-a-thon is about to begin! Please consider sponsoring me as I commit to write — and post — something new every day for 41 days.

What’s a Write-a-thon? Imagine a combination of NaNoWriMo and a walk-a-thon. Writers sign up to participate; we set a writing goal; we recruit sponsors to donate to Clarion West; and then we write for six weeks, from June 19 to July 29. It’s a great way to get some work done and help raise money for a great organization. (There’s more information on Clarion West at the end of this post, for those of you who aren’t familiar with it.)

This year, instead of working on a Sacred Precious No You Can’t Look Because It’s A Work In Progress And It Will Melt, Melt! project, I’ve decided to write something I can share every day.

Here’s the deal: Before I turn to my current writing project or my editing work for the day, I will write something short and brand new. I think of it as “priming the pump,” and as my chance to throw out ideas and see what sticks. These pieces will not be stories: they will be conversations, scenes, moments, ideas. Perhaps they’ll be seeds for new work down the road, perhaps they’ll simply be what comes out of my writing brain that day. Some of them will probably suck (grin). I think some will probably be pretty good. Whatever comes up, it’s my goal to stretch with these pieces, and perhaps explore new territory in my work.

I’ll post my writing here every day, and will be cross-posting to Sterling Editing, where I’ll be encouraging people to practice their editing skills on me.

And you can get in on the game! If you’re willing to pledge $35 or more to Clarion West, you can provide a prompt for a day’s writing: an object, an idea, a thought. I’ll write something based on that, and dedicate it to you. (Please note, I’m not accepting Tuckerization requests because these won’t be complete stories.)

I hope you’ll consider sponsoring me in the Write-a-thon for any amount that feels good to you — every single dollar counts, and no donation is too small. I am grateful for any support you care to give.

And if you’re a writer, please also consider participating! You can set any goal you want: start a project, finish one, or simply recommit to writing for 10 minutes every day. It’s a chance for all of us to write together, and to keep each other strong. That’s worth a million bucks, in my opinion.

And this just in: Nicola has said that if I can raise $2,000 for Clarion West, she just might do some naked writing too. Now wouldn’t that be fun? (You over there, go get some soap and wash out your mind!)

Thank you. Enjoy your day.

(Edited to clarify that although I’ve set the bar at $35 for the custom prompt, I am grateful for any support at any level from $1 up. Every single dollar makes a difference!)

——
About the Clarion West Writers Workshop

For nearly 30 years, Clarion West has helped emerging writers of speculative fiction kickstart their professional lives. Every year, we select 18 writers to attend our six-week intensive residential writing workshop. Each week, a different professional writer or editor leads daily workshopping, offers additional lectures and private conferences, and gives a public reading of their own work. We encourage students to write a new story every week, and to stretch as far as they possibly can.

It’s a transformative experience for many writers.

CW graduates have gone on to great careers and have won every major award in speculative fiction. CW is committed to expanding the field of SF to include women writers, writers of color, and LGBT writers. Our instructors are the best writers and editors in the field, and have included Chuck Palahniuk, Octavia Butler, Ursula K. Le Guin, George R. R. Martin, Karen Joy Fowler, Samuel R. Delany, Cory Doctorow, Joanna Russ, Greg Bear, Nancy Kress, and many more.

I’m the Board Chair of Clarion West, and both Nicola and I have taught at the workshop.

The Write-a-thon is CW’s biggest fundraising activity of the year. Last year, 75 writers signed up. This year, CW has set a stretch goal of 100 writers participating. If you’re a writer, we hope you’ll consider being one of them. If you’re a reader of speculative fiction, we hope you’ll consider sponsoring one of the fine writers who are participating. Do you know a writer? Persuade him or her to sign up, and then support their work with a donation to Clarion West!