Sort Blog Posts

Sort Posts by:

  • in
    from   

Suggest a Blog

Enter a Blog's Feed URL below and click Submit:

Most Commented Posts

In the past 7 days

Recent Posts

(tagged with 'Terry Jennings')

Recent Comments

Recently Viewed

JacketFlap Sponsors

Spread the word about books.
Put this Widget on your blog!
  • Powered by JacketFlap.com

Are you a book Publisher?
Learn about Widgets now!

Advertise on JacketFlap

MyJacketFlap Blogs

  • Login or Register for free to create your own customized page of blog posts from your favorite blogs. You can also add blogs by clicking the "Add to MyJacketFlap" links next to the blog name in each post.

Blog Posts by Tag

In the past 7 days

Blog Posts by Date

Click days in this calendar to see posts by day or month
new posts in all blogs
Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Terry Jennings, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 2 of 2
1. Guest Post: I killed My Mother by Terry Jennings

terryjenningscropped

Terry Jennings

I killed my mother, I must confess. And while I’m at it, I should admit I killed my baby brother too.  In the interest of full disclosure I should also own up to doing away with an uncle and a few cousins as well.

I know full well that matricide, fratricide—familycide in general—are frowned upon in polite society.  But I’m not the least bit sorry. In fact, under the right circumstances, I wouldn’t hesitate to repeat the act. I had to do it. My story, a fictional novel very loosely based on my life, was drowning with the weight of its characters.

To assuage any sensibilities that may be aroused by my dastardly acts, I will let you know that the murders were done off stage, very discretely. I could have lined them all up against a wall and shot them, right in front of God and everybody, and been totally within my rights. My story, after all, is set during the Cuban revolution in 1958—executions were common place. But I disposed of my family gently, elegantly. My mother, bless her soul, died giving birth to me. With one stroke of the pen I not only got rid of one very significant adult, but I also gave my protagonist a reason to have guilt—because she lived, her brother didn’t have a mother. I transformed the baby brother into a 17 year old and morphed the essence of the combined souls of the rest of my relatives into his character.

Having to kill and change people is a peril you run into when you write a novel loosely based on fact. Not just historical novels, like mine. When we know the story so well—when it’s our story, or the story of someone we know or have come to know—it is difficult to sacrifice the truth in order to let that fictional story shine through.

I think it was Stephen King that said you have to kill your darlings. I’m not sure he meant fratricide and matricide, but in essence, he said get rid of anything that doesn’t move your story forward. That is particularly hard when it comes to characters. Each one of those people had a story, an experience, which was significant to the historical context. Their experiences weren’t darlings to be cast aside. They were representative and exciting. And my real life was so lame, I had to draw on their experiences for my plot. I needed their experiences. Every one of them. But even I realized that the reader would need a cheat sheet with the names and life stories of each relative in order to keep up with the plot.

It was my friend Ivy Ruckman (Night of the Twister), who suggested an older brother replace the uncle. Why hadn’t I thought of that? That simple change made everything simple. In the brother I could develop the mindset of the young revolutionary, in love with Fidel Castro who could be the foil against the pro-establishment and anti-Fidel father. The brief discussions about the revolution which happen as a result of the action, are now organic. A perfect case of the new pared down cast showing rather than telling what it was like living in those first two and a half years of Castro’s revolution.

Another result of my murderous binge was that now my protagonist participated fully in all of the experiences without having to take a taxi. In the previous version, an older cousin (it happened, I promise) was writing pamphlets against the revolution to hand out at school.

Eventually, someone finds out, calls her and tells her she’d better stop of else. My cousin ended up in an embassy not long after that phone call. But in order to get my protagonist to see that, I had to invite her to a meeting at her older cousins’ house, find a way to get her money for a taxi and a way to sneak off to her cousins’ house, hear what the older kids are saying and later find out about the phone call and her cousin’s exile from her father. With the brother embodying some of the experiences of other characters, my protagonist is right there, in the same room. She chooses to write pamphlets of her own to distribute at church, and she is the one who picks up the phone when the ultimatum is received—who’s the ultimatum for, her or her brother? Now the book is full of energy and the narrative moves quickly from one exciting scene to another. No more taking a figurative taxi or a bus to get the protagonist to the action.

It was a significant change in the book, I must admit. More of a re-imagining of the whole story than a revision. But I believe it has been well worth it. Now we’ll see if a power that be agrees with me and buys my story. I really hope someone does. My cousins are really not happy that I killed them, whether on or off the stage. They were all hoping for a cameo. The only way I’ll keep them quiet is to prove them wrong and have a best seller.

http://literarymidwives.com/

Terry Jennings began writing in 1999. Her first piece “Moving Over to the Passenger’s Side,” about teaching her fifteen-year-old to drive was published by The Washington Post. She has written a few other articles for them and Long Island News Day.  Since then she has written for Ranger Rick and had a family humor column in her local newspaper, The Reston Connection. Primarily she writes educational text for the Smithsonian Science Education Center and other educational outlets. Gopher to the Rescue! A Volcano Recovery Story (Sylvan Dell, 2012) was named Outstanding Science Trade Book by the National Science Teachers’ Association and the Children’s Book Council.  Her other book, The Women’s Liberation Movement: 1960-1990 (Mason Crest, 2013) was named to the Amelia Bloomer Project’s recommended feminist literature for women birth to 18. Sounds of the Savanna, a book about sound as told through predator/prey interactions in the African savanna  is on its way with Arbordale Publishers. It’s due out fall of 2015.  Currently she is working on a historical novel about the Cuban Revolution (1959-1961) loosely based on her childhood along with a couple of other picture books–one on Magnetism and one on Erosion.

Thanks Terry for sharing your article with us. I will be doing a lot of killing this week.

Talk tomorrow,

Kathy


Filed under: Advice, article, Author, demystify, Process, revisions, Writing Tips Tagged: Literary Midwives, Terry Jennings

5 Comments on Guest Post: I killed My Mother by Terry Jennings, last added: 10/27/2014
Display Comments Add a Comment
2. Writing Industry Kudos

tracey berglund and polka dots260One of the first things I tell everyone is they need to network, get out there and meet people.  This is the reason I started doing the Summer Networking Dinners with agents and editors.  Well, today I have good news and proof that attending dinners and events where you get to interact with Publishing industry professionals does work.  Author/illustrator Tracey Berglund just signed a contract for representation with Stephen Fraser from the Jennifer De Chiara agency. 

Here is the story explained by Tracey:

I attended the Cafe Centro Agent and Editor dinner in July, because Stephen was going to the dinner and I had a short list of agents I admired and he was at the very top. I had not prepared any marketing sound bites to share that evening and the room was very noisy so I felt a bit intimidated, but fortunately I was seated next to Christina Turgeau and other really nice people, so I enjoyed my dinner and some great conversations. Stephen Fraser was sitting opposite me, but the table was very wide so he felt far away. I remember thinking that he had an open and inquisitive face and a charming bowtie.

Luckily, at some point I reached over to his side of the table for a breadstick, he caught my eye and complimented me on my dress! I had just returned from a trip to India and bought it because it had radiant peacock colors which reminded me of a story I’ve been working on. Before I knew it Steve and I were deep in conversation about travel, favorite cities-his is Paris, mine Rio de Janeiro; subways, and a gamut of other things. When the dinner was over I gave Stephen some printed samples of my art and told him how pleased I was to meet him.

A few days later I sent him a thank you note and asked if I could send him some of my stories. He kindly said yes, and over the next few months we kept in touch via email. I sent him several manuscripts, more of my illustration and one completed picture book dummy. He praised my art and sense of story arc. A few weeks later he wrote and mentioned that he kept thinking about one of my stories. He asked if he could have some time to think about it a bit more. Naturally I said yes.

Several weeks ago I attended SCBWI’s agent event and; Steve was one of the three agents speaking. I went over to say hello afterwards and waited patiently as Steve conversed with other enthusiastic writers. Steve was friendly and we chatted a bit. Once again, he complimented what I was wearing which was a T shirt with an illustration of a some characters from one of my stories.

A few days later, I was standing on the platform waiting for a F train and read his email offering to represent. I was so happy and said yes and sent him a photo had just taken with my iphone of a bunch of pigeons in front of my corner deli going wild over some cheese crackers. Instead of saying how odd and incongrous that was, he kindly wrote, “Thanks for the cool photo!” I am very honored to be able to call him my agent.

Tracey we are all happy for you and you are right Stephen is such a nice man and a wonderful agent.

jpfront%20cover

Buffalo artist, teacher and illustrator Jane Marinsky published her first children’s book with esteemed publisher David R. Godine three years ago. With a text by her daughter, Goat-Faced Girl was a great success, earning strong reviews. Godine has just released Marinsky’s second book, Just Perfect, for which she has provided both text and illustrations.

Talking Leaves on Elmwood Avenue will host a book signing for the new book on Sunday, December 2, at 1 pm. The event is free; anyone wishing to have a book signed must purchase it from Talking Leaves, as an act of respect and support for the author and the bookstore hosting the signing.

http://www.marinskyillustration.com/  Jane, Good Luck with the book!

karen belliAnother great thing I found out this week is that Karen Belli who reads by blog, took the time and submit to the 2012 Scare The Dickens Out of Us ghost story contest that she noticed on this blog and guess what? She won Honorable Mention. 

Having someone recognizes you this way can be just the boast you need to continue down that road to publication, so keep that in mind future for contests.  Congratulations! Karen.  Thanks for letting us know.

Tip: Always check out the contest before sending something in.  Each contest likes different levels of writing.  If your writing is humorous, it might not be good for a heavy literary magazine.  Take a few minutes to see.  It will save you money and rejection.

terryjenningsTerry Jennings’ book, Gopher to the Rescue, A Volcano Recovery Story (Sylvan Dell, 2012) was named Outstanding Science Tradebook for Students K-12 by the National Science Teachers’ Association and Children’s Book Council. Terry says, “I’m thrilled. I’ll even get to put little gold seals on the books.”

Here’s the Amazon link. This follows the release, earlier this month, of her other book, The Women’s Liberation Movement, 1960-1990, (Mason Crest, 2013) a wonderful history of women’s fight for equality and an explanation of why it took  forty years from the time women finally got the vote until we began fighting for equality.

Talk tomorrow,

Kathy


Filed under: inspiration, Kudos Tagged: contest, Jane Marinsky, Jennifer De Chiara, Karen Belli, Stephen Frazer, Terry Jennings, Tracey Berglund

14 Comments on Writing Industry Kudos, last added: 12/2/2012
Display Comments Add a Comment