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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: pumping the writers well, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Inspiration from the Library of Congress

As a researcher, one of the places that inspire me is the Library of Congress (LOC).   The building itself is a national treasure, but the collections it holds are even more precious.   No matter what you are interested in, chances are that the Library of Congress has some material that relates to it.  It is a gold mine of primary source material for teachers, students, and writers. 

The LOC has a vast amount of material online, but let me give you an example of just one small slice of it.  Let’s take photographs from the Civil War.  When I look at this collection I see powerful, amazing images of people on both sides of the war.  While I’m interested in photos of the famous people like Lincoln, Lee and Grant, I’m even more fascinated by images of average soldiers who are often unidentified.  When I look at their faces, I wonder what they experienced and if they survived the war. 

 
 
 

Photos of soldiers are not the only type of images in their collection; many are of women and children.  This touching image of a young girl in a dark mourning dress holding a photo of her father, says a lot-silently.

  

This morning I found an unexpected collection at the LOC:  eyewitness drawings of Civil War scenes.  There are lots of battle scenes and landscapes, but the one that drew my eye was this sketch of a soldier.  It makes me wonder who this man was and why the artist sketched his image.  Was he a friend or brother?   Was he a hero or a deserter?



Images like these can teach students a lot about history.  And they can inspire both fiction and nonfiction writers. 

Carla Killough McClafferty


http://www.loc.gov/

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2. Of Silver Linings and the Suffix "er"


Meteorologically-speaking, 2012 will go down in the Record Books as The Year of the Drought.
And metaphorically-speaking, as this series of TeachingAuthors posts affirms, writers too face droughts at some point in their writing lives.

But Bridget Doyle’s article in the August 18 Chicago Tribune last week emboldened me, the “Non-stop Finder of Life’s Silver Linings,” (according to my Six-word Memoir), to
share my seemingly-simple prescription for anyone suffering the pain and heartache of Writer’s Drought.

The Tribune headline reads GARDENS THRIVING IN DROUGHT – JUST ADD WATER


Kathy Wolan, of Arlington Heights, harvests tomatoes from her garden plot. Green beans are also “doing fabulous,” she says, and she has a bumper crop of basil. “We couldn’t control the sunlight or heat this year, but we could control the water,” she says. (Stacey Wescott, Chicago Tribune)

My Rx for writers wishing to thrive during their particular droughts?
Just WRITE!
Yes, write.

Maybe not that Great American Novel you know lives inside of you; maybe not that poetry collection you b

1 Comments on Of Silver Linings and the Suffix "er", last added: 8/22/2012
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