Discussing writing and werewolves at Ivy Tech

Today I had the great privilege to visit not one but two creative writing classes taught by my grad school friend, the wonderful poet Brianna Pike. I’ve always loved Bri’s approach to teaching writing as much as I love her poetry (and folks, she’s a hell of a poet!), so I knew I was in for a good time. But what neither of us realized — because Bri had set her syllabus up several weeks ago, and long before we’d finalized my visit — was how easily I slotted into her lessons today.

The classes were addressing setting. Hagridden is heavily dependent on setting, and setting is a subject I’ve written on before. Bri also mentioned the importance of research, including interviews with locals and actual boots-on-the-ground field research, to get a setting right. And, of course, I’ve done all that too. But then it gets weird: the story she’d selected for today was Angela Carter’s “The Werewolf”!

ROUGAROU!

So, it goes without saying that I had a lot to discuss with her students. But more to the point: her students are amazing. Their insights into the works they were reading and, even better, their seriousness about the craft of writing was invigorating, and I loved getting to talk to them!

Then this evening, I did a formal reading and another Q&A, and Bri’s students — as well as her fellow faculty and some other audience members — asked more hard, insightful questions! It felt great, hearing their ideas and offering up a few of my own, and I had a grand time.

Reading selfie!
Reading selfie!

Afterward, Bri and I joined another good friend of ours, writer and editor Will Tyler, for dinner, where we talked about basically everything: professors we still love, the unsung lucrativeness of ghost writing, the joys and frustrations of the classroom, the epic — now legendary — night Tom Franklin came to our alma mater, the University of North Texas.

1794790_10152681586495791_1423210699274445076_n

And to cap it all off, I drove south to New Albany, where I met with my good grad school friend, poet Steve Bowman — tomorrow I’m at Indiana University Southeast, where tomorrow, I give a reading from Hagridden and talk more about my 14 Principles for Creative Writers!

 

Writing advice from the very beginning

Today, I was on the campus of Columbus State Community College, where I led a workshop over the life of a writer and my Fourteen Principles for Creative Writers. As with most of my workshops, we had a nice, intimate group, which meant we could have a conversation, and I got to do one of my favorite things: learn from others.

At the beginning, I asked everyone to write down one rule they had for themselves as writers. It was a good mix, because the group in the room included fellow creative writing teachers, at least one professional writer, and a lot of students and beginning writers. And I told them I wanted to know where they’re starting from, what they think is important to them in their writing.

The workshop discussion developed from there as I then walked them through some of the guidelines I’d made for myself.

Photo by Brad Pauquette.
Photo by Brad Pauquette.

At the end, I asked them to write down one writing rule they wanted me to know — what did they have to teach me? And they had such great ideas that I asked if I could share them here on the blog. Not everyone was brave enough to give me their note card, but the ones I got are terrific.


Never discard a character that you create. They could always serve you later if you don’t need them today. ~ Luke Harris

I like this advice because it gives me permission to be the packrat that I am. I think we all ought to follow the usual advice to “kill your darlings,” which applies as much to characters as to whole works. But I like this idea of hanging onto discarded characters and using them later in a story better suited to them.


Entertain, or ‘don’t be boring.’ (It’s what I’m shooting for.) ~ Norris Forte

I’m very interested in writing as art, but I don’t see that and writing as entertainment as being mutually exclusive. I spent a lot of time today talking about how important it is to write things you yourself would most want to read, and that’s definitely about entertainment as much as artistry.


Take risks and trust my gut. ~ Denise Fisher

I love this twin bit of advice: combining the daring of risk-taking in writing with the comfort of trusting oneself. They seem contradictory, but each is so important to the other!


Write a poem every day. ~ Caitlin Garrity

I talked to several people today about how much I have learned about my prose style from reading poetry and talking to poets. Though I’m not much of a poet, this is good advice for me personally.


Discuss the commercial considerations (profitability — the money that can be made) as a professional. ~ Harold

I got it drilled into my head pretty early that I’m not going to get rich off my writing. Very, VERY few people do. So I’ve abandoned those expectations (though not those desires) a long time ago. But there is still money to be made in writing — for some people, perhaps even a living — and the nuts of bolts of writing as a job, of paying your bills with words, is something I need to give more attention to.


In the beginning, the only opinion that matters is yours. In writing, there are no boundaries. It’s just words. ~ Brittany Howard

When Brittany handed me this, I pointed to the note card she’d written it on and said, “Yes! Trust yourself, absolutely, but I like that you begin that advice with ‘in the beginning.’ Seek the opinions of others, absolutely, but start with yourself. This is great.”

Rougarous in Columbus!

So, I’ve been in Columbus, Ohio, for a couple days now and Ohioans, you people know how to party!

My first night in town I was part of the Indianola Stroll, a community business/art walk on Indianola Avenue. I hung out at the offices of Columbus Creative Cooperative, a writers resource business, where I met folks coming by and chatted about writing. Later, I did a Q&A about Hagridden and my experience with my agent and with Columbus Press.

A community member chats with my publisher.
A community member chats with my publisher.
The book table display.
The book table display.

We also set out props from our upcoming Rougarou: Journey to the End of the Night event:

20140919_181727
Rougarou masks and hands!

Yesterday, at the Bexley Public Library, I held a small workshop on writing fiction, in which I talked about creating a broad, connective fictional universe and how to beat writer’s block:

20140920_151325
Workshop selfie!
WP_20140920_002
The group was small, which made for great conversation with each person in the room, and the writers asked great questions!

After the workshop,  we spent the day setting up for the rougarou chase.

20140920_184604
The Columbus Press interns rode to the site with the cage — dressed as rougarous, of course!
20140920_184024
And I had to get in on the fun, too.

The JEN event was huge. Long before we were set to begin, people had begun turning up in the dozens upon dozens!

20140920_185331

20140920_185343

Those people called other people, or shared the news on Tumblr and Reddit, or just wandered by and got swept in by the excitement! By the time we’d gotten set up and ready to start, we had something like 150 people!

20140920_193218-1

Crowd selfie!
Crowd selfie!

Meanwhile, we had the rougarou locked safely in a cage nearby:

20140920_193707
Giving everyone directions for the chase/scavenger hunt went smoothly enough…
20140920_193954
But then the rougarou bit my publisher and broke loose from the cage — and the race was on!

I’m old and slow, so I passed on the chase and headed straight for the afterparty, where we had special drinks based on Hagridden.

20140920_173028

I tried all four drinks — I even made up a story for the order I drank them in: I started in the bayou, where I received a wolf bite, suffered a dark and stormy night, and ended up a rougarou!

Meanwhile, we were setting up for the after-race party, complete with the repaired rougarou cage, the tshirt company Outfit Good on hand to screenprint brand new rougarou tshirts, and my book display near the bar:

We had a lot of people who made it through the race still human, but many, many more got turned into rougarous along the route. Everyone seemed to have a great time, though, and I met a lot of great people and signed a lot of books. And otherwise we all just hung out, drank drinks, talked about the race or the novel, watched a werewolf movie, and finally, in the theater, gave away prizes!

A rougarou is loose in Columbus, Ohio!

black_rougarouThere are rumors. Stories of a strange creatures roaming the nighttime streets of Columbus, Ohio. At least one appears to be doglike — some say it resembles a wolf — but it walks upright like a man.

But there are also reports of a second creature, the rougarou, a swamp werewolf of Cajun legend. And yet here it is, lurking in the Ohio dark.

Readers of Hagridden will, of course, be familiar with the rougarou. But how did a Cajun werewolf get from the bayou of Louisiana all the way up to Columbus, Ohio?

I wrote the answer.


For other stories related to the events and characters in Hagridden, see “The Voices Captain Brewster Heard” in WhiskeyPaper and “What Have You Done to Deserve Such a Halo” in Bartleby Snopes. And stay tuned for at least one more story later this fall!

The Midwest Tour is one week away!

Second verse, same as the first!

After my Southern book tour for Hagridden, I came home to Portland for a release party here, but since then I’ve been enjoying a little breather. But gang, vacation’s over!

A week from now, I’ll be in Ohio to start the Midwest leg of the Hagridden book tour!

Rougarou_PosterWe’re talking meet-and-greets, workshops, readings, book signings — even a game of tag with werewolves! Seven events over six days in five cities in two states!

In Columbus, I’ll hang out with the locals during the Indianola Stroll, hold workshops at Columbus State Community College and the public library in the nearby town of Bexley, and run from werewolves (recently sighted in town!) before signing books, watching werewolf movies, and drinking with fans.

I’m also joining some other Ohio writers for a hip reading down in Cincinnati.

And over in Indiana, I’ll be hanging out with college students and doing readings at Ivy Tech Community College in Indianapolis and at Indiana University Southeast down in New Albany.

All the details are on the Book Tour page of the Hagridden website.

It’s going to be a wild ride, friends, and I’m going to need all the help I can get to keep my energy up, so if you’re in the area from September 19 through September 25, come out to something, bring three friends, and let’s party!

Thirteen years ago today

I was driving a two-hour commute to teach a college class. I listened to the news on the radio. At one point I had to pull over on the side of the road just to catch my breath. Later, I passed others who had done the same. When I got to school, I spent half an hour trying to figure out how to break the news to my students, because none of them had heard yet. I canceled the day’s lessons. I told them they could leave to call family or friends if they needed to, or they could stay and talk about how they were feeling. I asked them to try and not react with anger, because it was almost certainly anger that caused the attacks in the first place. Thirteen years later, I am still asking people to remember that.

People eating and drinking and snuggling with cats while reading Hagridden

More Hagridden pix! This edition features coffee and burgers and bells and cats — and the first-ever photo of the Hagridden e-book!:

Bri P
From Brianna P

FYI: I’ll be seeing my friend Bri in a couple of weeks, when I visit her creative writing classes and give a reading at Ivy Tech Community College. Hope to see you all there!

Trevor D
From Trevor D

PS: Trevor and I swapped books — his book, The Laws of Average, came out this year, too, and I encourage you all to buy a copy!

From the Franklin County Genealogical Society in Mt. Vernon, TX (photo by Sue Bolin)
From the Franklin County Genealogical Society in Mt. Vernon, TX (photo by Sue Bolin)

The Franklin County Genealogical Society, where my mother-in-law volunteers and for which my wife is webmaster, has set up a cool display of the novel — and if you’re in northeast Texas, you can actually stop by and order a copy through them!

Heather W (and Sparkle)
From Heather W (and Sparkle, the cat)

Hagridden on a Kindle on a cat! I think your day is now complete.

Have you ordered Hagridden? Take a photo of it and share it with me! And I’m still happy to share photos of Box Cutters, too!

The Portland release party: photos!

Portland, Oregon, is my home, a city I love like no other. And last night, my city loved me back.

We had the Hagridden release party at the Independent Publishing Resource Center, a very cool DIY printing workshop/zine library/classroom/event space/living museum of all things indie publishing.

20140906_192033

And yes, we had the books by the bar and we had my mother’s guestbook, which has become the official record of my book tour.

20140906_190553

20140906_190609

By the way, that rougarou print I had out on display (bottom-right of the photo above) was a big hit! It’s by illustrator Shaleigh Westphall, a graduate of Pacific Northwest College of Art, where I teach. It was part of her thesis project on regional cryptozoology last year– I loved the rougarou print so much I bought one!

It was an amazing evening full of area friends and teaching colleagues. We also had a lot of fellow writers — in addition to Monica Drake and Mark Russell, who read with me, we also had Kassten Alonso, Hobie Anthony, Trevor Dodge, and Todd McNamee in the audience, as well as Sally K. Lehman and Jessica Standifird from Blue Skirt Productions!

And, of course, my beautiful wife, to whom the novel is dedicated.

20140906_192622

And yes, I did the now-requisite reading selfie:

20140906_200419
Only in Portland would I get an audience member throwing the cunnilingus sign in my selfie. I love it!

Mark Russell and Monica Drake killed it with their readings, which were both hilarious and both about sex — perhaps to lighten the mood before all the murder in my book? 😉

For my reading, I tried something new: a “live book trailer,” in which I played background sound effects timed to coincide with moments in the passage I was reading. It was a different experience — I can usually breeze through a reading, and I know how to cover mistakes when I make them, but this thing was dependent on timing, so I had to have a well-practiced pace so I could hit all the right marks, and there was no room for mistakes or even clearing my throat! I think it went over well, though, and my wife tells me lots of people were talking about it afterward.

We got video, but there’s a break in the video, so it’s in two parts. But if I can splice it together in good enough quality, I’ll share it here!

Afterward, I signed a few books and we all hung out and talked shop — writing, reading, reviews. It was a wonderful evening, and I’m so grateful to everyone who came out!

And now I get to take it easy for a week or so — and then it’s off to Ohio and Indiana for the Midwest leg of my book tour, and then I’m back in Oregon for more events in October!

As the Cajuns say, laissez les bon temps roulez!

New publication

Photo Credit: Elisabeth Cox
Photo Credit: Elisabeth Cox

This summer, one of my primary writing projects has been composing new short stories related to my Civil War novel, Hagridden. Each story involves a minor character or two from the novel, people who have some important moments in the book but are definitely supporting characters to the main narrative; in these stories, those folks get their own narrative.

Today, WhiskeyPaper published the second of those stories, “The Voices Captain Brewster Heard.”

It tells the story of the captain whose wrecked ship was meant to carry “the girl” and her family to Galveston, Texas, but instead stranded them in Leesburg, Louisiana. Captain Brewster, like the girl, is stranded, and he travels the coastal towns looking for a new ship to hire onto — but what he finds will haunt him!

I wrote this story in honor of my grandfather, Captain Ted Snoek, who is a retired merchant mariner. When I showed him the story on my Texas book tour, he took one look at the title and said, “You know, we’re related to a Brewster! He was in the Civil War.”

I said, “I know, Grandpa. It’s why I named the character that. I remember all your stories.” Those stories, by the way, make their way into Captain Brewster’s stories for the children of Leesburg. Fighting off a gang of armed Cubans, detecting enemy ships — versions of those events actually happened to my grandfather (if you believe his stories . . .).

With my grandfather in Boerne, TX.
With my grandfather in Boerne, TX.

(FYI: There’s also a reference to “Negro Island” in the story. That, sadly, is based on a true story.)

You can read the first of these supplemental stories, “What Have You Done to Deserve Such a Halo,” in Bartleby Snopes. And more Hagridden-related fiction is coming soon! And the novel itself is out and doing well! Don’t own a copy yet? Find one in a bookstore near you! Or order one online!

Portland release party for Hagridden

Today’s the day, gang!

I’ve only been back in my home city of Portland for a few days, but it’s been enough to rest up from my big Southern book tour, and now it’s PDX’s turn for a Hagridden party!

And folks, this one’s gonna be a doozy.

We’re at the Independent Publishing Resource Center, one of the most popular gathering places for Portland’s literati! We’ll have beer and wine — of course! — and food and friends. And among those friends will be Portland’s own Mark Russell, author of God Is Disappointed in You, and Monica Drake, author of Clown Girl and The Stud Book— they’ll be reading from their work alongside me and my novel!

Monica Drake
Monica Drake
Mark Russell
Mark Russell

I couldn’t ask for cooler — or kinder — partners in my big release party, gang. And special thanks to Mark Russell, who actually spearheaded this whole thing so I could just relax and enjoy the party. He’s a hell of a guy, and if you’re close enough to come out to the reading, I want you all to buy his book, and Monica’s.

Buy all the books!

Oh, and it’s not just a reading, y’all. I’m going to attempt something like a “live book trailer,” with sound effects and whatnot. And Mark’s going to have background music (possibly because he’s so cool that he actually has a soundtrack that follows him around through his life). I don’t know yet what Monica’s up to, but bear in mind that she’s in on the whole “Bedtime Stories” adult pajama party thing with none other than Chuck Palahniuk, so she’s someone you want to hear read in person!

Of course, I’ll also have that guestbook my mom made me, so I expect everyone there to sign it and say hi to me. And I’ll have copies of Hagridden as well as copies of Box Cutters (buy both and you can claim you own every book I ever published!).

Seriously, this is going to be a fun night, gang. Just ask The Rumpus or Willamette Week. They know what’s up. 🙂

And if you can’t make it there, that’s cool, too. I’ll post photos from the party later this weekend, and I’ll be reading again in Portland at a handful of other venues through October and maybe November. Just as soon as I get back from the Midwest later this month!