CWC-Marin Branch Book Launch
Join us this Sunday for our branch-wide book launch.
We have two additional authors — Carol Sheldon, author of “A Sleuth in Sausalito,” and Roberto Haro, author of “Snowy Elixir: Formula for Death.”
Join us this Sunday for our branch-wide book launch.
We have two additional authors — Carol Sheldon, author of “A Sleuth in Sausalito,” and Roberto Haro, author of “Snowy Elixir: Formula for Death.”
Last Sunday’s “Calling All Writers” event at Book Passage provided two useful tools for writers, established and novice alike. The first hour focused on “How to Survive NaNoWriMo” — that’s National Novel Writing Month, which starts November 1 and challenges participants to write 50,000 words by 11:59 PM on November 30. The second hour covered how to turn those words into gold with the help of a critique group.

Think of NaNoWriMo as AA for writers, suggested the workshop leader, CWC-Marin board member Kasey Arnold-Ince — it provides daily support, accountability, a specific commitment of 30 days. Each day in November, after their writing stint, participants upload their working document to the website, which tallies the word count, and records it on their profile. There are also online forums and AA meetings — sorry, write-ins, in locations across the globe. (Even a few in Marin.) Though NaNoWriMo was created for novels, crafty non-fiction writers can also get in on the act by using the online website and app to develop their non-fiction. The algorithm that counts your words doesn’t care if it’s counting fiction or nonfiction.
NaNoWriMo is not a critique tool and no one will actually read or critique your work unless you choose to share some of it by adjusting the settings in your profile.
NaNoWriMo has led to success for writers — Water for Elephants and The Night Circus were both started at NaNoWriMo.
Here are some tips that Kasey shared:
Nonfiction is typically two to three times faster to write than fiction, because you don’t necessarily have the plot issues, character development snafus that plague the fiction writer. Nonfiction writers are often expert in their field and can draw on their experience.
Kasey compared NaNoWriMo to a writing experience in high school where her English teacher gave students the apparently Herculean task of writing a hundred poems in a month, and regularly checked on her students’ progress. While the poems in the first week weren’t so great, she recalled, they served the purpose of “purging” sentimental, clichéd, and overly emotional poems, creating breathing space for better poems to be written in the later weeks.
Victoria Hudson, author of No Red Pen — Writers, Writing Groups & Critique, led the second hour discussing how to create a successful writing group. Here are some her tips:
One benefit of being a California Writers Club member is, or should be, an opportunity to get more readers for whatever you’re writing. But many of us are uncomfortable promoting ourselves. So let’s promote each other.
Are you an author who’d like to be interviewed and featured on this website, Facebook, and elsewhere?
Are you a writer who’d like to interview a fellow CWC-Marin member?
Contact John Byrne Barry — I’ll play matchmaker, connect an interviewer with an interviewee. See the interview with Club president Joan Steidinger as an example.
Since we can’t always make it to the monthly meeting, we thought it would be useful to capture the essence of the presentations for those who weren’t there. Here’s the summary of David Corbett’s excellent workshop on character that Laura Lopez and I put together from our notes. We’d love to be able to do that for every workshop, but we need some member-writers to agree in advance to take notes and then distill them for posting here on our blog. Might that writer be you? Contact John Byrne Barry or share your idea in the comment area below. We’ll spread it out so each of us only has to do it now and then. And if you want, we’ll team you up with someone.
Most CWC-Marin meetings feature a presentation where one or several people is in the front of the room, and the rest of us are in the audience. But this year, at 1 pm, before the 2 pm formal meeting, we’ve been hosting “Opening Acts,” geared toward getting to know each other and sharing our work or ideas.
Earlier this year, the Club held an Open Mike, where participants got ten minutes to give a short reading and solicit feedback. Another time, we read the first page of the book or story we were working on.
Before our October presentation on NaNoWriMo and Critique Groups, we’ll be pitching our projects, completed or imagined, in a minute or less, and giving feedback to each other.
Have an idea for an Opening Act? Contact John Byrne Barry or share your idea in the comment area below.
Join us on October 25 to kick-start, develop, and polish your writing projects!
Know a hard-working independent bookstore employee who’s making a difference in their store and their community?
Nominate them for a holiday bonus from best-selling author James Patterson, who will be giving $250,000 in holiday bonuses, ranging from $1,000 to $5,000.