Showing posts with label Re-engaging readers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Re-engaging readers. Show all posts

Monday, October 31, 2011

Writer's Quench

Photo by Kejadlen (www.flickr.com/photos/kejadlen/222615074/)
There are days and seasons when your creative juices are sucked dry. When you move a family of six to a new city and have to unpack gazillions of boxes, tend to a 7 month old, deal with school transitions, and try to fall in love with a house that might not be your dream home (okay, I am referring to myself at this moment in time). Or there are other times that aren't so drastic-- a bad night's sleep, a visit from the in-laws, a season where you just feel...parched. You might sit and look at the screen, fingers in the a-s-d-f and j-k-l-; position, and read your last sentence twenty times. You attempt to write a new one. It sounds thin and boring and elementary...and you thirst for those creative juices to pour from your finger tips...and they don't.

What do you do with thirsty sentences, writing?

Sometimes, you just shake your head, pound the backspace key, and slam your laptop as hard as you can without doing any damage. And then spiral downward in thoughts of, “I can't do this”, “I am no natural...it shouldn't be this hard”, “maybe I will just throw in the towel.” This is when you need to hit your knees, pray for guidance. Get connected with your writing friends, seek encouragement. Don't give up, just press hold until your emotions have settled and you can think straight. (A good night's sleep is always helpful)!

Other times, you sigh and decide it's that time in your life that you are suppose to be taking in the words of others. Read, read, read. I have four-ish novels that I have started reading, and I pick them up whenever I have the chance...it has slowly quenched my writing thirst...given me inspiration to tackle writing again.
Photo by Christopher Craig (www.flickr.com/photos/kriztofor/3724503239/)

But the most rewarding of times, is when you fight through the thirst, type on, dig deeper, dig, dig, dig. Ignore the distress of those sentences you are struggling to form. Leave them in their moisture-deprived dust! Let them be, for the moment, and keep on!
Suddenly you feel that rush, that beautiful bubbling of creativity springing into your writing. You can always go back and “water” those thirsty sentences with your revived artistry. When you can stick it out and allow bad writing to sit there and move the story forward, you will discover a spring of eloquence in your waiting.


Don't get discouraged...JUST KEEP WRITING!

Do you have any tips you'd like to share to persevere through less-desirable writing times?

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

On Being Mentored: Re-engaging Readers

Have you heard a speaker, read a book, watched a TV show or movie, or heard a song that stayed in your mind for days, even months later?  


A year later something sparked the memory and kindled a replay of your favorite portions? 

My response usually is: hum the tune, laugh out loud, or quote story lines--all of which solicit strange looks from those around me who haven't a clue why I physically responded. Hence the question from them, "What are you doing?"

I could melt back into my cubical, embarrassed, OR 


At this point--this golden moment--I could tell them what  bounced through my memory.

Unknowingly, I have become a sales person for the book, movie, et.al. 

I don't mind.  


Actually, I'm quite happy when a person asks, "What book are you talking about?" because I can influence them to read something I enjoyed.

An important step to quality writing is:  hook the reader.  True.  So true. BUT a hook is simply not good enough to keep a reader.

A hook invites the reader to, say, step aboard the boat.

The first page, back cover and front cover convinces the reader to stay in the boat for at least a moment or two.


Chapter one escorts them to the best seats.

The next chapters convince the reader not to jump overboard, instead focus on the spectacular view as the boat is cast off.

Remaining chapters entertain the reader on the journey. Inviting readers to sit next to a character through storm and gale, car accident, lost love, raid, Christmas dinner, etc

The last page safely escorts the reader back to the shore.

NOW what? Close the book? Let it collect dust? No! 


This is a crucial moment. Has the story begun to replay in the reader's mind?

A year from now will the hook pop in the reader's mind? (probably not)

--but a story line such as, "Hello. My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die." (from Princess Bride) is sure to spark the memory of the movie and call for more scenes to replay. Perhaps the person might say the line out loud or unintentionally flash their invisible sword. Caught by a curious co-worker or friend questions are asked until they too become engaged in a replay of the story.

What causes whole stories to replay in our minds?

Karen Ball taught a class at the ACFW conference this year. Her humor definitely was the hook. But great jokes alone wouldn't cause her students to replay the messages she wanted to deliver. 

Karen gave a short opener (saturated with great humor), asked exciting questions that forced the audience to come on board to hear her topic, moved about the room as she spoke (actively relating to her audience), called up a panel of experts to validate and share their journeys, (each with a humorous flare), asked more leading questions to keep the audience involved, and then wrapped up with an exciting conclusion, of course, soaked in jokes. No one wanted to leave. 

Then it happened--the crucial moment! 


After her class the words instantly replayed in my mind. I told my roommates about the class. I told new people I met in the halls about the class. The words replayed again the next day--and now two weeks later have replayed in my mind again and so I'm telling YOU. 


I have become a salesperson. Most likely one year from now I will recall the message from the Seat of the Pants class when information about the ACFW conference pops in my mailbox. I'll hope to take another class with Karen and bring a bigger pad of paper for notes.

My job is not simply to hook readers, or tell a great story, BUT to entice the reader to sit in the boat next to the characters, to become their shadow as they move about the boat and to experience their journey. 

Then-- 
the reader will re-engage themselves
 when something from their environment sparks a memory, 
and will replay the story in their mind, 
to experience the journey again.

And now while editing this post one last time, I remembered this same method was/is used by Jesus. He hooks his listeners, invites us to come on board to hear His Story, to sit next to Peter, Paul, etc, become their shadow as they move about the boat, experience their journey, and then tell others as we remember and relive.


What books have you relived in your thoughts?
What books caused you to spill enthusiasm to others?
How can you help your reader walk in the shadow of your characters?