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You are here: Home / Archives for memoir writing

AZ Authors Associ Writers Circle welcomes Patricia L. Brooks to speak on The Art of Writing Memoir

September 17, 2013 by Patricia Brooks

WRITERS FAIRE 2012 011

 

The Art of Writing Memoir

AZ Authors Association – Writers Circle

 

  North Mountain Visitor’s Center

12950 North 7th St., Phoenix, AZ 85022

 

RSVP/register info@azauthors.com

Limited Seating

 

 Patricia L. Brooks, speaker, author, consultant patricia@plbrooks.com

 

 www.blog.brooksgoldmannpublishing.com

for details 480- 250-5556

In this workshop you will immerse yourself in the art of powerful storytelling and take an unflinching look at your own stories.

You will learn to incorporate fictional techniques into your memoir writing to enhance your effort to share galvanizing events.

 

Objectives of this Workshop

ü Learn to help your reader see and feel what you saw and felt.

ü Understand the process and structure of memoir writing as a learned craft that will enhance your art.

ü Appreciate the power of storytelling by being loyal to your truth.

ü Further empower yourself to tell the truth.

ü Take an unflinching look at your stories and share your galvanizing events.

ü Bring your memoir writing to a new level with fictional techniques.

 

 

 

Filed Under: AZ Authors Association, Blogroll, brooks goldmann publishing, Featured post, gifts of sisterhood, Memoir, memoir writing workshop, SCOTTSDALE SOCIETY OF WOMEN WRITERS Tagged With: AZ Authors Association, gifts of sisterhood, memoir, memoir writing, Patricia L. Brooks, published authors, SCOTTSDALE SOCIETY OF WOMEN WRITERS, women authors, writers

Some of What I Learned at the Desert Nights Rising Stars Conference – Seven Secrets to Writing Memoir – and more

April 10, 2013 by Patricia Brooks

Seven Secrets to a Successful Memoir – and more

My thoughts – Desert Nights Rising Stars Writers Conference

Arizona State University – Spring 2013

 

Timing is everything, as they say and the timing at Desert Nights Rising Stars could not have been better for me.  By sheer coincidence the DNRS move this year to more memoir and creative non-fiction arrived in the wake of my second memoir.  Here are Seven Secrets to this genre I discovered at the conference, and a few more tips – including some of my own.

Have you ever wondered what happens at DNRS conference weekend behind the vastness of Old Main?  The answer is simple:  invaluable guidelines on writing prose, demonstrations on how to write memorable dialog, lists of quality books to read, demonstrations on editing, thoughts on seeing images clearly to enhance descriptions, encouragement about being critiqued, and so much more.  I learned too that I must show immersion in my memoir and fine tune my writing with some fictional techniques.

The positive and upbeat attitude of the faculty reinforced for me that there is a place for all writers in this writing life.  Here is an elaboration of my notes on memoir from that weekend.

 

Be Open to New Ideas

The most important thing you can capture in your research is how to process your memoir.  Start with little chunks.  Write from memory, from interviews, from reflections on old photos and revisited conversations.  I write with fierce abandon initially and use these prompting methods.  This plan allows me to enjoy building my story.  Start with rhetorical questions you can come back to periodically.  With a journal I find “morning pages” helpful.  Try these:

  • What am I willing to share?
  • What if?
  • Who will I tell?
  • How will I tell it?
  • How will I get to the truth?
  • Who tells me not to share my story?
  • Do I own it?
  • Is my story too dangerous to tell now?
  • Am I willing to journal first and then share?

 

Live the Whole Truth

Remember this is your version of the truth.  Write for a sense of discovery too.  You do not need a timeline and are not limited to just what happened.  Your philosophy about these experiences, and your lessons learned, are valuable parts of your memoir.  You are the expert and have wisdom and knowledge in many areas.

Do not be afraid of your truth and lose your power.  Do not change your story.  Remember your truth is stronger than fiction.  There is power in your honesty.  Take an unflinching look at your life and your experiences to catapult your work to a new level.  Do not be afraid to step out of memoir to fiction if you want to experiment with your stories, but be sure you do not lose what you want to say.

I feel freer in my second memoir than with the first.  It is an unbelievable experience for me to tell my truth about the violence and trauma in my story and have the encouragement I have received from my critique group.

 

The Seven Secrets

  1. When you tell
    1. Take time to contemplate that decision and be sure you are ready.
    2. Allow the distance you need from a traumatic event or the insight required for a galvanizing experience.  Do not portray yourself as the victim.   I waited five years with my first memoir due to grief and loss and 10 years with the second one due to post-traumatic stress recovery from violence.
    3. Step back and give the story and experience time to blossom into something that is worth sharing.
  2. How you tell
    1. Be sure the voice you choose is the best voice for the story.
    2. Consider your voice as a child or that of another family member or as the narrator.  I prefer first person as I feel that is my strongest voice and critical to my success.
  3. What sequence you use
    1. Look at the big picture and analyze your stories thoroughly.  A chronological format is not the best way to go with your memoir.  You need a hook in the beginning and an arc where the change takes place.
    2. Get the reader in quickly to the intensity of the prose.  My assault story leads in detail to my second memoir to advocate for women who have experienced violence.
  4. Where you end the breadth and span of time
    1. Remember a memoir is about a particular event or time in your life.  We can write many memoirs.  I am writing a second one now.  When asked what genre I write I respond with memoir and non-fiction.
    2. Memoir is not a life history or biography in chronological order.
  5. What amount of backstory you need to use
    1. Avoid the pitfall of being too close to the material and not seeing the flaws in your thinking or the unimportant items in your stories.
    2. Consider the areas of your past that are lessons learned.  Use events that have shaped who you are and what you are about to complement the points you are making with your memoir.
    3. Intersperse them in your main theme as threads.  I have used my past trauma and violence survival to show patterns, and my walk through recovery to show hope.  I view my life from many angles.
  6. Who is involved in your storyline
    1.  Acknowledge you understand others can help bind the work.
    2. Be able to forgive and look at the lessons learned.  With my second book on assault and survival with violent crime, I had a lot to forgive.  I address forgiveness in my spiritual journey chapter.
  7. Why you select a particular structure
    1. Write your memoir/ non-fiction in your unique way.  Invite your readers inside the story with a gripping theme to help move it along.
    2. Consider using quotes and other materials.  We have the experience in these incidents and we are the expert on the topic.  We have a right to tell our stories and see ourselves in our own light.
    3. Take your theme throughout the book and thread your ideas to keep it a page turner.  In my second book it is the PTS issue from violence and my spiritual transformation in recovery from PTS that sets it apart.

 

When Family is Involved

It is important to note that everyone reacts differently to physical descriptions of themselves.  So many of us fear the secrets that we know exist in our families and in our lives.  I know I did, but I also knew that the truth would set me free. I had to describe the enemy the way he was and not fear retaliation.  I had to tell my truth about love addiction and abuse.

Often, on so many levels, we are in denial of what happened in our lives.  Sibling rivalry does exist.  It is usually not seen because we are in the middle of the competition and it is all that we know.  This can be good fodder for a memoir.  Most family members want to be portrayed as a hero.  This writing at times is going to be difficult, so just do your best.

Your imagination can fail you, so tell your story true to you.  Do not be concerned about bitterness and anger, just confess what you know and forgive yourself and others along the way.  There will be a moral imperative – somebody was deeply wronged somewhere in your family history.  That may be the story to tell.  Give yourself permission to tell it from your perspective.

Inciting events need to be in your story.  Consider fictional techniques such as scene and dialogue, plot and setting descriptions to enhance your work.  Go deep to bring them to us in memoir form.  Have empathy for all the characters and add some humor in there too.  Remember, you are not the victim of your story.

Now that you have moved away to write and given yourself some space and permission, tell the story and share the experiences the way you want to give us your work.  Be the heroine or hero in your pain or joy and triumph in the end.  Write with your mind and your heart.  Ask yourself what voice leads your truth.  Good luck and happy writing.

It is with much gratitude I say thank you to both Marylee MacDonald (http://members.authorsguild.net/mlmacdonald/index.htm ) and Bhira Blackhaus (www.underthelemontrees.com) for their generosity as speakers at this conference.  I have shared some of their ideas in this piece.  I appreciate the insights they gave and the opportunities they offered us.  We learned from them.

 

Patricia L. Brooks, author, speaker, consultant, educator

patricia@plbrooks.com 480-250-5556

www.blog.brooksgoldmannpublishing.com

 

Filed Under: Blogroll, conferences, Memoir, memoir writing workshop, WRITING TIPS FOR YOU Tagged With: ASU writing workshops, books, Desert Nights Rising Stars, Marylee MacDonald, memoir writing, memoir writing workshops, women writers, writing memoirs

Scottsdale Society of Women Writers – welcomes Carlette Lewis Patterson – speaker, author and sports life coach to share her ideas

August 10, 2012 by Patricia Brooks

SCOTTSDALE SOCIETY OF WOMEN WRITERS

Welcomes Carlette Patterson I Thought We had Forever….

Speaker, Author, Sports Life Coach – August 29, 2012

WHO: Scottsdale Society of Women Writers

WHAT: Monthly Speaker/Dinner Meeting

WHERE: Chaparral Suites Resort, 5001 N, Scottsdale Rd. at Chaparral Rd light, NE corner – Enter off Chaparral Rd – 4th Floor Grill entrance, then left to the Cactus Room

WHEN:          August 29th Wed. 5:30-7:30 – Sizzle in our Summer Season!

HOW: PLEASE – RSVP now to Patricia L. Brooks, president/founder

Cell 480-250-5556 or patricia@plbrooks.com See Details Below

WHY: The Scottsdale Society of Women Writers
gives members access to events of interest, a format for exchanging ideas, an
opportunity to network with other women writers and authors, an alliance with
businesses relating to writing, publishing, camaraderie and support.

SPEAKER/AUTHOR: Carlette Patterson is the author of I Thought We had Forever a collection of love letters, emails, and journal entries that reveal the passion and pain a
family went through when their forever ended on July 28, 2004. It is a love
story that began when retired NBA player Steve Patterson took a blank piece of
paper and penned a collection of love letters that changed the course of many
lives. Carlette holds on to her family as her five-year-old daughter is forced
to understand grief, her young adult daughter finds her way back from drug
addiction, and her oldest daughter navigates life with Aspergers. www.ithoughtwehadforever.com

BIO: Carlette Patterson is an internationally recognized Sports Life Coach, a professional speaker, and CEO of Patterson Sports Ventures, a company committed to equipping people to become Agents of Change utilizing the language and power of sports. Carlette is committed to
Coaching for Significance and draws on her personal challenges and triumphs combined with 20+ years of senior leadership in professional, collegiate, and amateur sports organizations to ignite purpose and passion within her clients.  Carlette and her family live in Phoenix, Arizona. www.carlette.com

See notes below for dinner fees, format and location directions.  Thank you.

MENU:  Salad, dessert, beverage and roll or a sandwich/soup, dessert, beverage and roll. Both with tax and gratuity included – make your choice the night of the meeting.

COST: $22.00 for members – $25.00 for guests (able to visit twice before joining)

CHECKS:  Please make check payable to Scottsdale Society of Women Writers prior to
coming to the meeting to save time at the check-in table.  Thank you.

CHECK-IN:  Please check-in between 5:15 and 5:45.  The meeting starts promptly at 6:00.  Leave your check made payable to SSWW.  All those attending the meeting must pay for
the dinner/room/speaker.  Pick up your name badge – thank you and ENJOY!

AGENDA:  The agendas will be on the dinner table – always a lot of good INFO for you.

DIRECTIONS:
Chaparral Suites is in Scottsdale at Chaparral Rd just north of Old Town.  Chaparral Rd has a light.  Parking is in the rear – two large parking lots.

Note: best to enter from the middle elevator for the 4thFloor Grille. From the 101 freeway exit Chaparral Rd and go west.  Just prior to Scottsdale Rd enter the side drive at 4th Floor Grille – take that elevator.  Note awning marked 4th Floor Grille.  This is the easiest way in – NOT
through the main lobby.  The larger parking lots are in the back of the complex.

Goals of the Group

Value all the professional women writers seeking to
share their expertise

  • Honor all genres and all forms of professional writing
  • Attend monthly meetings  to move the group and its members
    forward
  • Learn and share in the experiences of monthly
    professional speakers
  • Grow the group to a membership of active and
    contributing women
  • Encourage participation by members as presenters,
    mentors, judges and volunteers
  • Support and challenge each other to always be
    writing
  • Help members to stretch as writers and reach lofty
    personal goals
  • Have fun,  meet trustworthy women writers, share dreams

Filed Under: AZ Authors Association, Blogroll, memoir writing workshop, SCOTTSDALE SOCIETY OF WOMEN WRITERS Tagged With: authors, books, Carlette Lewis Patterson, grief and loss, memoir workshop, memoir writing, publishing, SCOTTSDALE SOCIETY OF WOMEN WRITERS, women writers, writers, writing

Scottsdale Society of Women Writers welcomes Lisa Farringer Parker – memoir author, professor of writing, AZ Republic columnist

November 4, 2011 by Patricia Brooks

SCOTTSDALE SOCIETY OF WOMEN WRITERS

Welcomes memoir writing expert – professor of writing and newspapercolumnit to speak at monthly dinner meeting!

LISA FARRINGER PARKER

Speaker Scottsdale Society of Women Writers

WHO: Scottsdale Society of Women Writers

WHAT: Monthly Speaker/Dinner Meeting – celebrate writing

WHERE: Chaparral Suites Resort, 5001 N, Scottsdale Rd. at Chaparral Rd light, NE corner – Enter off Chaparral Rd – 4th Floor Grill entrance, take elevator, exit 4th floor, left to the Cactus Room

WHEN:          NOV30th Wed 5:30-7:30 – Celebrate Fall with us!

WHY: The Scottsdale Society of Women Writers gives members access to events of interest, a format for exchanging ideas, an opportunity to network with other women writers and authors, an alliance with businesses relating to writing and publishing, and camaraderie and support.

HOW:             PLEASE – RSVP now to Patricia L. Brooks, president/founder

Cell 480-250-5556 or patricia@plbrooks.com SEE DETAILS BELOW

SPEAKER: Lisa Farringer Parker – Memoir Author, Professor of  Writing and Columnist

Angels in the Darkness

Historical/Memoir

Publication Date: April 2011

Author: Lisa Farringer Parker

ISBN: 978-1-60494-438-9

A Family’s Triumph
over Hitler and World War II Berlin: 1935–1949

THE BOOK

It is 1936 and Jesse Owens is poised for victory. Berlin is on full display. Hitler is firmly in control.  Six-year-old Jutta Bolle relishes Owens’s victory and the excitement of the Olympics. But the darkness is already engulfing Jutta’s world as her family confronts the evil of Hitler. Each year brings more unimagined hardships and heartbreaks until finally, in 1945, bombs destroy what remains of Berlin and fifteen-year-old Jutta and her father run for their lives. The Russians are coming. In a matter of days Berlin will be surrounded, unleashing a new round of misery.  Though written like a novel, Angels in the Darkness tells the dramatic true story of the Bolles’ struggle to survive the tyranny of Hitler’s government, a war they did not believe in, and the subsequent brutal occupation of their home and city by the Russians.

THE AUTHOR – Lisa Farringer Parker

www.lisafarringerparker.com

Lisa Farringer Parker is a successful attorney and author. A former professor of writing at Arizona State University, she has appeared on CNN and is a regular contributor to the Arizona Republic. She lives in Paradise
Valley, Arizona, with her husband, Vernon B. Parker, the former mayor, and her two children. Jutta Bolle is her mother.

See notes below for dinner fees, new format and new location, thank you.

MENU:  Salad, dessert, beverage and roll or a sandwich/soup, dessert, beverage and roll – both with tax and gratuity included – make a CHOICE the night of the meeting.

COST: $22.00 for members – $25.00 for guests (able to visit twice before joining)

CHECKS:  Please make your check payable to Scottsdale
Society of Women Writers PRIOR to coming to the meeting to save time at the check-in table.  Thank you.

CHECK-IN:  Please check-in between 5:00 and 5:45 at the table at the door so we can start the meeting promptly at 6:00 – thank you.

(1) Leave your check made payable to SSWW

(2) All those attending the meeting must pay for the
dinner/room/speaker

(3) Have your name checked off the RSVP list

(3) Pick-up your name badge – your receipt for the food
server

AGENDA:  The agendas will be on the dinner table and
the format remains the same.

DIRECTIONS: Chaparral Suites is in Scottsdale at Chaparral Rd just north of Fashion Square Mall – Chaparral Rd has a light.  Parking is in the rear – two large parking lots Note: best to enter from the middle elevator for the 4th Floor Grille.

From the 101 freeway exit Chaparral Rd and go west.  Just prior to Scottsdale Rd enter the side drive at 4th Floor Grille and come up that elevator – it is in the center of the hotel complex.  There is an awning marked 4th Floor Grille.  This is the easiest way in – not through the lobby.  The parking lots are in the back of the complex.

Goals of the Group

Value all the professional women writers seeking to
share their expertise

Honor all genres and all forms of professional
writing

Attend monthly meetings  to move the group and its members
forward

Learn and share in the experiences of monthly
professional speakers

Grow the group to a membership of active and
contributing women

Encourage participation by members as presenters,
mentors, judges and volunteers

Support and challenge each other to always be
writing

Help members to stretch as writers and reach lofty
personal goals

Have fun,
meet trustworthy women writers, share dreams

Filed Under: Blogroll, Memoir, memoir writing workshop, SCOTTSDALE SOCIETY OF WOMEN WRITERS, WRITING TIPS FOR YOU Tagged With: angels in darkness, books, lisa farringer parker, memoir writing, newspaper columnist, professor of writing, SCOTTSDALE SOCIETY OF WOMEN WRITERS, women writers, writing, WRITING TIPS FOR YOU

MAKING MEMORABLE MEMOIRS MAGICAL – Visit me in the Red Rocks of Sedona Sept. 18th, 2010

August 22, 2010 by Patricia Brooks

Making Memorable

 

 

 Memoirs Magical

 

 

Write  Compelling Memoir

THE WELL RED COYOTE BOOKSTORE

www.wellredcoyote.com  

Sept 18th, 2010

HWY 89A West – Sedona, AZ – RSVP

Patricia L. Brooks, Author, Speaker

Publishing Consultant, Educator

Brooks Goldmann Publishing, LLC

www.brooksgoldmannpublishing.com and www.plbrooks.com

 

Getting from Point A to Point B to Point C

Desire to Struggle to Realization

 

·        Give us the Emotion and Drama

o   Face your issues directly

·        Give us your Revelations and your Regrets

o   Show us pain and suffering – your overcoming adversity

·        Give us the Vulnerable Moments

o   Demonstrate your authentic self in intimate details

·        Make it Relevant and Essential to our lives

o   Take us on an adventure or spiritual quest

·        Take Control of the story

o   Voice your opinions and thoughts

·        Dig Deep and Reveal yourself to us

o   Illuminate your transformation and renewal

 

What did you want out of Your Life? 

How did you Struggle?

How did you Realize your Dreams?

THANKS TO WRITERS DIGEST MAGAZINE for some of these ideas www.writersdigest.com

Filed Under: Blogroll, brooks goldmann publishing, gifts of sisterhood, marketing consultation, Memoir, memoir writing workshop, PUBLISHING PICKS, SCOTTSDALE SOCIETY OF WOMEN WRITERS, WRITING TIPS FOR YOU Tagged With: authors, authors and regrets, authors emotion, brooks goldmann publishing, gifts of sisterhood, Memoir, memoir writing, pain and suffering gets published, Patricia L. Brooks, publish, realize your finished book/memoir, revelations in writing, sedona, struggle to write, well red coyote bookstore, workshop on memoirs, writers, writers voice

MEMORABLE MEMOIRS and you

October 31, 2008 by Patricia Brooks

Good Morning!

Memoir writing is personal and intimate.  It is for you first.  It can be for family, for friends, to heal, to leave a legacy or to tell a story, to educate, to inform, but many times to serve a unique purpose.  Here are ideas I use in my workshop – Memorable Memoirs.  They should be helpful to you.  These bits work for me and were accumulated from various sources that I deem reliable. 

My first memoir – Gifts of Sisterhood – was to honor my sister and celebrate her life that impacted me with gifts for a lifetime.  Little did we know the book would take on a life of its own and the workshop Journey from Grief to Gratitude.  It was first to take us through the grieving process after she passed away from lung cancer, and later to carry our mission:  Share her courage and wit through her many gifts. 

The ultimate goal was to bring attention to lung cancer and the 70,000 women who die from the disease each year, thus the Stop Smoking Sister campaign was born.  Your journey will be different.  Mine took me home to Ireland and a chance to write about it in my last chapter, about taking my sister’s spirit with me to County Tipperary.  Yours will be the same in many ways, and unique to you. 

Best of luck to you as you prepare to launch your Memorable Memoir.  Take what works for you and let me know your questions or comments – we will work together.  I am at the third revision stage of my second memoir – this one on my two-times experiencing violent crime and now thriving after the journey through PTSD.  SEE handout below – HAPPY WRITING! 

n What is a Memoir Story?

n Telling us about your MYSTERY in a new way – who are you?

 

n What Memoir Writing is all about

n Being courageous, compassionate  – enduring personal frustrations

n Sharing wisdom, private truths, INTIMACY – making sense of life

 

n What is the Memoir’s significance?

n Express experience with FEELINGS – Show us who you are and what you believe

 

n Who do we Write for and Why?

n Family, friends, ourselves, those lost – To heal ourselves or others

n Because we must – our VOICE must ring – truth and clarity

 

n  How do we Write and about What?

n  Inner truths, REJOICING – Adventures, spiritual quest – Injustices or overcoming adversity

 

n The Journey of Writing for Yourself

n Personal fulfillment – Spiritual experience – Anticipate the journey

n See yourself as the “HERO” of the story – not the victim or angelic

 

n You as the Protagonist/Hero

n Know something must die, to be REBORN -End with a burst of energy, transform

 

n The Journey of Writing for Healing

n Guide your own life with empowerment – be profoundly human – explore you

n Know yourself, your uniqueness – REVELATIONS of important moments

 

n The Passion of Writing for Others

n Share yourself – reap REWARDS and spirit of community – not for revenge or self-service

 

n Consider the Story to be Told

n Don’t just write down everything – Invent and create your story from natural sound

n Input EMOTIONS and meaning – Do your research – Know characters intimately

 

n Ending with Happy or Sad Impact

n Always an opportunity for book #2 – Beginning and ending are YOURS inconveniently

 

n OPTION #1 – The Yellow Brick Road

n Sections of maturing – Life is in cycles – linking KEY events – Interrelated stepping stones

 

n OPTION #2 – The Critical Piece of the Pie

n PIVOTAL events – Any place in time – Learned – Realized – Desired – What changed?

 

n OPTION #3 – Weaving the Web

n Use of a THEME – passion and/or purpose – Play with time – Conflicts and/or struggles

Filed Under: Blogroll, Memoir Tagged With: Add new tag, autobiography, biography, family history, geneology, gifts of sisterhood, journey from grief to gratitude, legacy, lung cancer, memoir, memoir writing, memoir writing workshops, memoirs, stop smoking sister, write, writers, writing

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