WRITERS' Journal
Table of Contents
September/October 2005
Volume 26, Number 5
Columns
2 .....Editor's Note
4 .....Marketing Helps, Janet Elaine Smith
Slogging
through the World of Blogging
5 .....Massaging the Muse, Lynne
Pisano
Light the Way
to Writing Tight with a Lantern Poem
7 .....Effective Screenwriting, by
Christina Hamlett
Beware the
Artful Dodgers
Once
upon a more innocent time, the measure of an organization's legitimacy was
proportional to the perceived expense of its letterhead and business cards. I
even recall to this day a friend of my mother declaring, "Well, obviously
it's a real company! Why would they spend money on such nice stationery if it
wasn't?"...
10 .....Photography Techniques, by Ronald D. Kness
Shooting in
National Parks
By
last count, approximately 300 million people make this nation's national parks
their vacation destination, and the majority of those people bring a camera or
two with them. And why wouldn't they? The beauty of the landscapes, wildlife,
and other subjects provided my Mother Nature, coupled with families experiencing
all of this, make these parks the most photographed destinations in America.
After shooting photos in the Grand Canyon, Yellowstone, Grand Tetons, Zion,
Cedar Breaks, and Bryce Canyon, I offer some tips and techniques to improve your
photos of these national park destinations....
12 .....Computer
Business, by Colin G. West
Using Microsoft
Word, Part Three: Even More Really Useful Stuff
The
techniques outlined in these articles were tested on my computer, which runs
Windows 98SE. If your computer uses Windows XP, one or two of the procedures may
be slightly different. Nothing you can't cope with.
51
.....Creativity Contests, by Dorothy J. Geiger
September/October 2005
There
are numerous creative contests offered by national advertisers. We have expanded
our information to include such opportunities to include writing, photography,
slogans, captions, short reviews of movies, and personal experiences....
59 .....For
Beginners Only, by Sandra Miller
Targeting
Enemy Words—How to Spot Wasted Words
Writers
are notorious for their love of words. Because of that, we often have a hard
time learning to consider certain words as enemies. Here are some words that can
suck the impact out of your writing....
60 .....Words...Tools of Our Trade,
by Betty Garton Ulrich
Lessons
Learned from a Best Seller
What
writer hasn't dreamed of having an unexpected best seller that suddenly blasts
off and takes the world by storm? Like what happened to J. K. Rowling and her
phenomenal Harry Potter series. That's supposed to happen maybe once in a
lifetime. Well, it seems to have happened again in the case of another British
writer. Her name is Michelle Paver. Years ago, when she was a student at Oxford,
she wrote a fantasy about a boy and a wolf living in the wild....
61 .....WRITERS'
Journal Market Report, by
Laurie Graziano
Did
you ever wonder whether it's better to read the book or to see the movie? Unless
forced, many people opt for the movie. They take the quick fix of the visual
stimulation, where every color, motion, action, and reaction is performed. But
isn't that really just settling for the easiest option?....
Markets: Home Remodeling Cape Cod & The Islands, ShowBoats International, Time Out New York, Smallville Magazine, New Jersey Savvy Living, South Jersey Magazine, Southwest Fly Fishing, Travel + Leisure GOLF, Writers Ask.
Feature Articles
19
.....Copyright Protection for Writers, by Maryan Pelland
Easy Ways to
Control Your Material
An
e-mail from a formerly reputable vendor flamed in uppercase declaration,
"Act NOW! Copyright your writing, your Web site, your very name. Thwart
unscrupulous others bent on stealing your work for nefarious purposes."....
22
.....What's Your Genre?, by Robin Theiss
The
Importance of Form and Intent
In
writers' circles, the popular equivalent to "What's your sign?" is
"What's your genre?" Many writers, especially beginners, are often at
a loss to answer this most fundamental question concerning their craft. Some
respond vaguely, with "Fiction" or "Nonfiction," tossing the
ball back into the inquirer's court to determine exactly what kind of fiction or
nonfiction they mean. some simply look distressed and launch into a detailed
description of a current literary project. Others resort to naming some of the
authors they admire and hope to emulate in their own writing....
41
.....Ten Simple Exercises to Improve Your Craft, by Robert R. Hostetler
Great Writing
Begins with Hard Work
I used to think that writers were magic.
Mysterious. Special. A breed apart. Then I became one....
42
.....Writers' Notebook
Favorites: rhymezone.com
, m-w.com , www.onelook.com
, www.symbols.com .
Gripe
of the Month, Colin G. West
43
.....The Art of the Rough Draft, by Sidney C. Blaylock, Jr.
Learn to
Tell, and Then Show
Draft,
drafting: A working version of a piece of writing. The process of setting ideas
down in writing so they may be revised and edited.—Harbrace College
Handbook, Fifteenth Edition.....
45
.....Critique Groups, by Libby Grandy
To Join or
Not to Join
I
host an empowering, motivating critique group that meets once a week at Borders
Bookstore in Montclair, California. Since its inception seven years ago, our
members have written and published many articles and several books, crediting
the invaluable critiques they received. Consequently, I strongly recommend
joining such a group....
46
.....The Myth of Being "In the Mood" to Write, by
Turn from
Mood to Method
Fiction
March 2005 Horror/Ghost Winners:
27
.....The Sound of the Sea, by Steve Muscato
First Prize
Winner of 2004 Horror/Ghost Contest
28
.....A Mother's Obligation, by Christopher
Brooks
Second Prize
Winner of 2004 Horror/Ghost Contest
30
.....The Ninth Life, by Emily Jean Carroll
Third Prize
Winner of 2004 Horror/Ghost Contest
More Fiction
32
.....The Big Money, by Ivan M. Forbes
Honorable
Mention Winner of 2004 Short Story Contest
36
.....The Real Fantasy, by Sherry H. Salois
Honorable
Mention Winner of 2004 Romance Contest
April 20, 2004 Write to Win! Winner
38 ....."Trouble With the Boss"—The dew covered...," by Phil Decker
Poetry
53
.....Every Day With Poetry, by Esther M. Leiper
"What
about Free Verse? Part One of a Two-Part Column"
Here's
the simplistic view: "Rhymed verse—it rhymes, see? Like moon, June,
croon; or light, bright, trite. And free verse—well, it doesn't rhyme."
This is true to a limited point, but not useful to the thoughtful poet. In fact,
the virtues of free verse—as opposed to those of traditional verse using rhyme
and meter—is a debate that has been ongoing since Walt Whitman's time. Then in
the 1980s, just when the modern poetry world smugly declared rhyme to be
"history," the Expansive/New Formalism movement developed, the
proponents of which say, "Not so Fast."...
57
.....Esther Comments On..., by Esther M. Leiper
"The
Fabric" and "Busy Fingers"
"The
Fabric," by John McCrevey, is a poem ostensibly about a piece of material,
perhaps a blanket or a throw used on a sofa. McCrevey—or the speaker (who may
or may not be McCrevey)—tells us that it was "all the same color"
when new, but since he has "lived in it, on it, around it,/it is many
hued."
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