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Successful NaNoWriMo Authors Speak! |
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by Dan Gibson
Sure, it's fun (albeit taxing) to take on NaNoWriMo, but what happens after? You've spent an entire month working frenetically on your novel. What can you do with your digital file and your dreams? We spoke to three published authors (Simon Haynes, Angela Korra'ti, and Kathy Cano-Murillo) who are also NaNoWriMo'ers about their experience with the project, how they benefited, and what December had in store for them.
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Interview With Lynda Drews |
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by Dan Gibson

One would imagine Lynda Drews wishes she didn't have the material for her first book, Run at Destruction, a murder mystery involving a member of her running group in the 1980's.
While losing a friend in a violent manner is a terrible event to experience, Drews serves her friend's memory well with a book that honors her memory and shows how a group of people tied together by a common love can become a sort of family. Lynda Drews (virtually) sat down with Between the Lines' Dan Gibson to discuss how Run at Destruction came to be.
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Writer, Reader, Lover |
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By Jesse Steele
It is an astonishing fact that many experienced as well as inexperienced writers with whom I have worked have not given much thought to what the reader is experiencing in each scene of a novel. Perhaps it is because courtesy—considering the experience of the reader—is often ignored in dry schooling, where literature is examined for structure and technique more than effect. Consider also that many newcomers to writing want to get something off their chests, which leads them to imagine the audience as passive receptors rather than active enjoyers of a heightened experience fashioned for them by the writer.
~ Sol Stein, How to Grow a Novel, Chapter 1: The Responsibilities of the Writer
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The Story of a Story, by Michael Loyd Gray |
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Michael Loyd Gray was born in Jonesboro, Arkansas, in the shadow of Graceland and Elvis Presley, but grew up in Champaign, Illinois. He earned a MFA in English from Western Michigan University and has taught at colleges and universities in upstate New York, Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Texas. He graduated from the University of Illinois with a Journalism degree and was a newspaper staff writer in Arizona and Illinois for ten years, eventually conducting the last interview of novelist Erskine Caldwell. He is the winner of the 2005 Alligator Juniper Fiction Prize, the 2005 The Writers Place Award for Fiction, and has written three novels and a screenplay based on one of the novels. His novel Not Famous Anymore was awarded a grant by the Elizabeth George Foundation. His novel December’s Children was a finalist for the 2006 Sol Books Prose Series Prize. A lifelong Chicago Bears and Rolling Stones fan, he lives with two insolent cats, EH and Moonpie.
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Interview: Bestselling Author Matt Richtel |
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with Adriann Ranta
Matt Richtel is the bestselling author of Hooked: A Thriller About Love and Other Addictions, his debut. Richtel is a veteran reporter for the New York Times, largely on the topic of technology and telecommunications, as well as the writer of “Rudy Park,” a comic strip set in an internet café. He lives in San Francisco where he is working on a sequel.
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Interview: Award Winning Short Story Writer, David James Poissant |
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with Adriann Ranta
David James Poissant's stories have appeared or will appear in Playboy, The Chicago Tribune, Willow Springs, The Chattahoochee Review, Redivider, Orchid, and the anthology Best New American Voices 2008. He has won the Playboy College Fiction Contest, the George Garrett Fiction Award, and 2nd Prize in the Atlantic Monthly Student Writing Contest. He has attended the Sewanee Writers' Conference as a Georges and Anne Borchardt Scholar, been a finalist for the Nelson Algren Award, and twice been nominated for the Pushcart Prize. He received an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Arizona, where he also served as Co-Editor of Sonora Review. He is currently a PhD candidate at the University of Cincinnati where he is at work on a collection of stories.
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Interview: Kevin Smokler - Writer, Thinker, "Maker of Mischief" |
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with Lynne Marie Zerance
LMZ: What I really like about your book on being a writer in the 21st century, Bookmark Now: Writing in Unreaderly Times, is that its overall theme is so optimistic. Lately, all I’ve been reading, hearing, and observing is that a new writer’s chance of getting published today is dismal at best, so your book has a refreshing message. Can you tell our readers why, in your opinion, aspiring authors should keep writing in the hopes of getting published—despite the odds?
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Interview: Author & Writing Instructor Janet Burroway |
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With Kevin Allison
Janet Burroway is the author of eight novels, plays, poetry, essays, texts for dance, and children’s books. Her Writing Fiction : A Guide to Narrative Craft, is the most widely used creative writing text in America, and her multi-genre Imaginative Writing is in preparation for a third edition. She is Robert O. Lawton Distinguished Professor Emerita of the Florida State University. She divides her time among Florida, Wisconsin, and London.
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