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Discovering Wes Moore is the YA follow up to education advocate, veteran, and Rhodes Scholar Wes Moore’s New York Times bestseller, The Other Wes Moore. The Other Wes Moore is the story of two men with very different paths. While one is heading off to Oxford University on a scholarship, the other was sentenced to life in prison. The Other Wes Moore traces their paths from childhood to adulthood. What went wrong in the life of the other Wes Moore? Discovering Wes Moore is an accessible version of the bestseller, for young readers, requested by teachers.
This Way Home is Wes Moore’s first young adult work of fiction, with Shawn Goodman. Moore and Goodman’s book is set in Baltimore, which has been in the news most recently due to several protests in response to police brutality. Elijah and his friends live for basketball but a street gang threatens to take that all away if the team doesn’t rep their colors. What happens if they don’t give in? What happens when a community takes a stand?
I want them [young people] to say, “He gets my life. He gets what I see. He understands what I know.” — Wes Moore on writing This Way Home
Watch this episode to learn more about Wes’ books, what he is doing to further his service mission as a veteran, and how he’s making attending college a bit easier for young people in Maryland.
We’re giving away three (3) signed copies of Discovering Wes Moore and This Way Home. Enter to win this mini bundle, now!
For fans of “The Wire “and “Unbroken “comes a story of two fatherless boys from Baltimore, both named Wes Moore. One is in prison, serving a life sentence for murder. The other is a Rhodes Scholar, an army veteran, and an author whose book is being turned into a movie produced by Oprah Winfrey.
Two men. One overcame adversity. The other suffered the indignities of poverty. Their stories are chronicled in “Discovering Wes Moore,” a book for young people based on Wes Moore’s bestselling adult memoir, The Other Wes Moore.
The story of the other Wes Moore is one that the author couldn t get out of his mind, not since he learned that another boy with his name just two years his senior grew up in the same Baltimore neighborhood. He wrote that boy now a man a letter, not expecting to receive a reply. But a reply came, and a friendship grew, as letters turned into visits and the two men got to know each other. Eventually, that friendship became the inspiration for “Discovering Wes Moore,” a moving and cautionary tale examining the factors that contribute to success and failure and the choices that make all the difference.
ABOUT THIS WAY HOME
This Way Home by Wes Moore with Shawn Goodman
Published by Delacorte Press/Random House
One young man searches for a place to call home in this gut-wrenching, honest novel from New York Times bestselling author Wes Moore with Shawn Goodman. Elijah Thomas knows one thing better than anyone around him: basketball. At seventeen, he’s earned the reputation of a top-level player, one who steps onto the court ready for battle, whether it’s a neighborhood pickup game or a tournament championship. What Elijah loves most about the game is its predictability: if he and his two best friends play hard and follow the rules, their team will win. And this formula has held true all way up to the summer before their senior year of high school, when a sinister street gang, Blood Street Nation, wants them to wear the Nation’s colors in the next big tournament.
The boys gather their courage and take a stand against the gang, but at a terrible cost. Now Elijah must struggle to balance hope and fear, revenge and forgiveness, to save his neighborhood. For help, he turns to the most unlikely of friends: Banks, a gruff ex-military man, and his beautiful and ambitious daughter. Together, the three work on a plan to destroy Blood Street and rebuild the community they all call home.
This Way Home is a story about reclamation. It’s about taking a stand for what matters most, and the discovery that, in the end, hope, love, and courage are our most powerful weapons.
ABOUT WES MOORE
Via theotherwesmoore.com Wes Moore is a youth advocate, Army combat veteran, social entrepreneur, and host of Beyond Belief on the Oprah Winfrey Network. His first book The Other Wes Moore became an instant New York Times and Wall Street Journal bestseller.
Born in 1978, Wes and his sisters were raised by their widowed mother. Despite early academic and behavioral struggles, he graduated Phi Theta Kappa in 1998 as a commissioned officer from Valley Forge Military College, and Phi Beta Kappa from Johns Hopkins University in 2001, where he also played football and earned a bachelor’s degree in International Relations. He then became a Rhodes Scholar, studying International Relations at Oxford University.
After his studies, Wes, a paratrooper and Captain in the United States Army, served a combat tour of duty in Afghanistan with the 1st Brigade of the 82nd Airborne Division. Wes then served as a White House fellow to Secretary of State Condeleezza Rice. He serves on the board of the Iraq Afghanistan Veterans of America (IAVA), The Johns Hopkins University, and founded an organization called STAND! that works with Baltimore youth involved in the criminal justice system.
Wes is committed to helping the parents, teachers, mentors, and advocates who serve our nations youth. A portion of all book proceeds for “The Other Wes Moore” are being donated to City Year and the US Dream Academy.
The Armenian genocide and the Holocaust took place decades ago, but the novelist William Faulkner was right when he said that “the past is never dead. It’s not even past.” It had been hoped that “Never again!” might be more than a slogan, but in April 1994, the Rwandan genocide began and was soon in full cry.
Stella by Starlight, by esteemed storyteller Sharon M. Draper, is a poignant novel that beautifully captures the depth and complexities within individuals, a community, and society in 1932, an era when segregation and poverty is at the forefront.
Someone asked me at a recent book talk why I chose to write about hope and children in poverty. They asked whether it was frivolous to write about such a topic at a time when children are experiencing the challenges associated with poverty and economic disadvantage at high rates. As I thought about that question, I began to reflect on the stories of people I know and families I’ve worked with who, despite the challenges they experienced, were managing their lives successfully. I also reflected on popular figures who shared stories in the media about the ways in which they overcame early adversity in their lives.
As I reflected on these stories, it occurred to me that a common theme among these individuals was hope. I began to see the various ways in which hope is a highly influential and motivating force in their lives. This kind of hope is not passive—it is not merely wishing for a better life, but it is active. It involves thinking, planning, and acting on those thoughts and plans to achieve desired outcomes. It is the driving force that keeps us moving despite the adversity and allows us to adapt and to be resilient in the midst of these circumstances. In reflecting on these themes, I decided that I wanted to tell these stories and to link the stories with theoretical frameworks that help illuminate why I believe hope is so important. Most of the theories and ideas I discuss are well known to those of us who study children and families. However, it occurred to me that practitioners and policymakers may not be so familiar with these ideas and may find them useful in planning their work with children and families. My goal is to foster understandings of hope and resilience in practical terms so that together researchers, practitioners, and policymakers alike can help more children and families manage their circumstances and chart pathways toward well-being.
I Hope You Dance. Photo by Lauren Hammond. CC BY 2.0 via sleepyjeanie Flickr.
So when I think about a response to the question “Why focus on hope?” — I respond “Why not?” Why not focus on strengths rather than deficits? Why not focus our interventions, legislative activities, and funding priorities on processes that will motivate individuals to strive for the best outcomes for themselves and their children? In so doing, we can formulate an action agenda on behalf of children and families that first assumes they can and will succeed in rising above their circumstances.
As I learned from the families I interviewed, success means different things to different families. For some, success is being able to keep their family together—have dinner together, talk with each other, and support each other. For other families, success means being able to be a good parent– to go to bed at night realizing that you’ve provided for your child emotionally, spiritually as well as materially, and that by doing so, your child might have an even better opportunity than you did to achieve success. These individuals are truly courageous. They have overcome many obstacles and are striving to continue along that path. There are countless other courageous individuals who may never have the opportunity to tell their stories or to have their experiences validated with concepts and theories I discuss from the psychological literature. I hope this volume will represent their lives too. I challenge those of us who work with children and families and who advocate for or legislate on their behalf, to have the courage to “ hope” and to allow that hope to be a motivating and unrelenting force in our efforts to foster resilience and well-being in these families.
Dr. Valerie Maholmeshas devoted her career to studying factors that affect child developmental outcomes. Low-income minority children have been a particular focus of her research, practical, and civic work. She has been a faculty member at the Yale Child Study Center in the Yale School of Medicine where she held the Irving B. Harris Assistant Professorship of Child Psychiatry, an endowed professorial chair. She is the author of Fostering Resilience and Well-Being in Children and Families in Poverty.
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Weathford, Carol Boston. 2010. Oprah: The Little Speaker. Illustrated by London Ladd. Tarrytown: NY.
If ever there was a life story about overcoming odds, Oprah, The Little Speaker is it. It's well worth remembering that as recently as the 1950s, a woman in the rural south could be raised in such primitive conditions
in a run-down house off a Mississippi dirt road...No indoor plumbing, just an outhouse, not even a bed of her own. ... God only knew what would become of that child.
Well, we all know now what became of that intelligent and precocious child. An inspiring story of Oprah Winfrey's earliest years; a paean to faith and the power of words.
Enjoy the trailer by Jefferey Weatherford.
Today's Non-Fiction Monday is hosted by Bookends. Head on over!
So I’ve been living in Los Angeles for six years now! Wow! Time just flies when your having fun, or surviving is how I feel personally. How do I feel about Los Angeles? Hmmm… very love/hate relationship. There are aspects about Hollywood you can’t get anywhere else. There are also things about the city most people will never encounter. It’s a tough place period. People are struggling to make ends meet, pay the bills, and keep up in this never-ending rat race. As a young person growing up in Los Angeles, I know personally, it’s an easy place to loose yourself. People desperately want the answer and solution to all their problems, and are often willing to pay an arm and leg to do so. If you don’t know yourself, you can easily cash in to adopt someone’s belief system, praying it will work out for you as it did for them. It’s also a money-making city. “Well, besides you sending me out, how can I get myself out there?” I ask my agent. “Casting Director workshops.” She answers. “But those cost money!” I naively protest. ” Honey, welcome to Los Angeles.” She answers kindly. Narcissism is emphasized, competition is fierce, and people constantly thrive on one-upping one another.
Now, to some, I may sound pessimistic, negative, and judgmental. I get it. I understand. But as a person, if you meant me, I’m known to others as friendly, kind, positive, talented, honest, with a big, warm heart. My heart has helped me in many ways, and led me to several lucky breaks. However, as a kid growing up here, it made me vulnerable, naive, and led me into some pretty crappy situations that I genuinely feel would not have happened had I lived somewhere else. It’s a cold city. I’ve had many moments when everything in my life went dark, I only had one or two people who stuck by me. When Everything in life was great, you bet your bottom I had everybody in my life and then some! When your exposed to that, being so young, yes it can make you very cynical and wary of people afterwards.
Not that I wasn’t fair-warned. My best friend at the time took a special trip with me down to Los Angles, really showing me how it is, to warn me about moving to this city. I almost didn’t come. But something in me had to discover this big bad place. And I did it. Oh boy! Was I thrown around or what! But, at the same token, by encountering so many rough obstacles and seemingly impossible situations, I was challenged to hold onto myself. Only my spirit and goodness could have enabled me to survive. Los Angeles, in all of its badness and falsities gave me the greatest gift in the world. It forced me to discover who I truly am in the face of adversity. A friend of mine once referred to Los Angles as the wild wild west. And he was right. It truly is.
So I’ve been living in Los Angeles for six years now! Wow! Time just flies when your having fun, or surviving is how I feel personally. How do I feel about Los Angeles? Hmmm… very love/hate relationship. There are aspects about Hollywood you can’t get anywhere else. There are also things about the city most people will never encounter. It’s a tough place period. People are struggling to make ends meet, pay the bills, and keep up in this never-ending rat race. As a young person growing up in Los Angeles, I know personally, it’s an easy place to loose yourself. People desperately want the answer and solution to all their problems, and are often willing to pay an arm and leg to do so. If you don’t know yourself, you can easily cash in to adopt someone’s belief system, praying it will work out for you as it did for them. It’s also a money-making city. “Well, besides you sending me out, how can I get myself out there?” I ask my agent. “Casting Director workshops.” She answers. “But those cost money!” I naively protest. ” Honey, welcome to Los Angeles.” She answers kindly. Narcissism is emphasized, competition is fierce, and people constantly thrive on one-upping one another.
Now, to some, I may sound pessimistic, negative, and judgmental. I get it. I understand. But as a person, if you meant me, I’m known to others as friendly, kind, positive, talented, honest, with a big, warm heart. My heart has helped me in many ways, and led me to several lucky breaks. However, as a kid growing up here, it made me vulnerable, naive, and led me into some pretty crappy situations that I genuinely feel would not have happened had I lived somewhere else. It’s a cold city. I’ve had many moments when everything in my life went dark, I only had one or two people who stuck by me. When Everything in life was great, you bet your bottom I had everybody in my life and then some! When your exposed to that, being so young, yes it can make you very cynical and wary of people afterwards.
Not that I wasn’t fair-warned. My best friend at the time took a special trip with me down to Los Angles, really showing me how it is, to warn me about moving to this city. I almost didn’t come. But something in me had to discover this big bad place. And I did it. Oh boy! Was I thrown around or what! But, at the same token, by encountering so many rough obstacles and seemingly impossible situations, I was challenged to hold onto myself. Only my spirit and goodness could have enabled me to survive. Los Angeles, in all of its badness and falsities gave me the greatest gift in the world. It forced me to discover who I truly am in the face of adversity. A friend of mine once referred to Los Angles as the wild wild west. And he was right. It truly is.
Adversity does not build character. Adversity reveals it.
The Beginning of a memoir or work of fiction (1/4 of the entire project) for any age group serves -- among other things like the setting, the dramatic question, the mystery - if there is one, the love interest- if there is one, and the like -- to introduce the character's emotional development. This is where the character strengths and flaws, loves and hates, dreams and goals are introduced.
The Middle (1/2 of the entire project) serves to reveal the deeper nuances of the character's emotional development. This is the part of the story where the writer thrusts the protagonist into as much adversity as possible in order to reveal to the reader or movie goer who the character really is. (Plot tip: make a list of all possible antagonists-- other people, nature, society, belief system, and/or machines -- that can help to create conflict, tension and suspense or curiosity and thus reveal who the character is under pressure -- the more pressure the better)
The End (1/4 of the project) is that portion of the project that actually shows how the character's emotional development has been affected by the adversity in the Middle and reveals how the character has been transformed.
These steps in the overall character emotional transformation can be plotted out on a Plot Planner for ease in developing your project.
What is the most revealing adversity you have experienced either through your character or in your own life?
Its not just the adversity that counts, its the preparation the character makes to confront the adversity that helps build suspense and gets the reader to participate.
Then its the reflection that comes after the adversity that builds the bridge to the character's emotional state.
Adversity doesn't have to come every scene. The ones that come before and after are just as important.
poetryandprose said, on 3/29/2008 11:25:00 PM
The biggest adversity I face? Waking up everyday.
Becky Levine said, on 3/31/2008 9:12:00 AM
Giving up trying to fit in and starting to find places I fit, instead!
Probably a major thread of the YA I'm working on. :)
Anonymous said, on 3/31/2008 12:27:00 PM
The death of my father and two dogs.
Beth said, on 3/31/2008 6:48:00 PM
Another great plot tip, Martha--to go beyond the standard "villain" in creating conflict and delve into all types of conflicts between the character and their environment. Sure heightens the tension (and potential loss...which is why we read!)
Nature Nut /JJ Loch said, on 4/1/2008 12:45:00 PM
In my life - having to start over. My ms(s) all have that theme now that I think about it. The characters have lost the definition of their lives and now have to find themselves when the circumstances are challenging.
As I was finishing up my mainstream rough draft, I received THE CALL!!! And it was for something different than where I was heading, but something I am passionate about. Am waiting for another phone call. Amazing!!!
Hugs, JJ
Jon said, on 4/1/2008 4:48:00 PM
Any successful novel or short story must have an element of adversity, it's what makes it work.
There may be a theme to the overall plot such as moving into a haunted house - which in itself is an adversity. However, what if the new owner of the house is a recovering drug or alcohol addict with enough ghosts of his/her own to deal with never mind the ghosts he/she is now co-habiting with.
Every story must contain an element of adversity. But your characters must also face adversity, it's what makes them human.
Martha Alderson said, on 4/1/2008 4:59:00 PM
Thank you for commenting, all you wonderful people.
Anonymous, what you write is key and something I'm exploring myself right now. Thanks for you insights.
Poetry and prose, I feel for you.
Becky, what a perfect goal -- finding places you fit. Let me just tell you that you'll always fit with me!!! Wonderful YA thread to explore.......
Anonymous, I feel for you.
Thanks, Beth. Yes, a standard villain, can be just that -- standard / thus -- cliche????
And, what, JJ, was the CALL??? I am so excited for you. Nice when we explore that which is difficult only to find a "payoff" for the hard work done.
Jon, I love your ghost house with a character haunted by their own ghosts!!
So fun to hear from everyone. Thanks for taking the time. And, it's not just me thanking you, it's all the other writers who may not themselves comment, but learn and grow from those of you willing to go out on a limb and comment.......
BT Cassidy said, on 4/1/2008 6:50:00 PM
When I read the first line I was blown away. “Adversity does not build character, it reveals it” and I thought, Wow, that’s so true of everyday life, and then I read further in your post. You outline the development of character perfectly, and even though, as I’ve mentioned in the past, I’m not one for developing characters off the page, I must agree with your points in every way. Even for writers like myself who develop characters “On the fly” to remember just that first line of your post is an important, and powerful thing- A fantastic post that’s leading to me going back further through your back catalog, Thanks = )
Martha Alderson said, on 4/1/2008 11:17:00 PM
BT, I can't believe I came up with the intro quote myself. I must have heard it somewhere and it stuck -- mainly because it had a similar impact on me that it seems to have had on you.
Thanks for your kind words. martha
livetowrite said, on 4/2/2008 9:09:00 AM
My biggest adversity is overcoming my crippling belief that what I write doesn't matter, that no one will want to read it.
Nature Nut /JJ Loch said, on 4/2/2008 9:54:00 AM
Martha, I have a prominent literary agent.:D WOOT! Should hear more news soon. It's hard waiting.
Hugs, JJ
Carlene said, on 4/2/2008 10:33:00 AM
My 39-year-old husband had a massive heart attack and nearly died. It taught both of us to live each day and make the most of it - it's all we have.
Carlene www.themysterystartshere.com visit my mystery blog!
Teresa LeYung Ryan said, on 4/2/2008 12:58:00 PM
Dear Martha, Great question. The greatest adversity for my protagonist would be her own self-doubts. Antagonists appear, but, really, it's her not believing that she "can" or that she "deserves," which leads her to disaster. By the way, recently I watched both your Plot Planner and Scene Tracker (VHS!) over 2 days; both sessions helped me tremendously; gave me a fresh look at my project. Even though I have your book, and I've been fortunate to have gone to your workshops and received private consultations, and had sold my first novel because of your tutelage, the tapes were valuable because I could "pause" and work at my own pace. You are awesome; I wish I could put you on my shoulder whenever I sit down to write.
billie said, on 4/3/2008 2:24:00 PM
Martha, just stopping by to say hello and commend you on the wonderful stuff here. I'll definitely be back!
Anonymous said, on 4/6/2008 10:42:00 AM
my loving family and friends are my greatest adversities when it comes to my writing. no one likes it when i'm writing. they'd rather i be with them
she said, on 4/10/2008 9:34:00 AM
love this post. -remembering my prayers:
dear God,
please stop building.
amen.
(have added your blog to my rounds martha -great meeting you. love your book. will stay in touch)
love, ~sandra
Martha Alderson said, on 4/10/2008 7:07:00 PM
Heart wrenching adversity -- our ability to discount our gifts, play small, believe in the darkness over the light.
JJ -- I hope you'll share your great news when it comes!! What a thrill........
Tragedy strikes. Out of the ashes comes the gift of every moment.
Thank you, Teresa, for your generous words. The universal struggle to count.
Anonymous, your loving family friends are giving you the opportunity to practice standing up for yourself and protecting your writing time......
Thanks to the rest of you for your kind words........
My blog's been quiet for the past week because I was in San Diego on a family vacation. It was an incredible week in so many ways, but this was the highlight...
I was lucky enough to spend last Monday, the night of the total lunar eclipse, camping in the middle of Anzo-Borrego Desert State Park. Before we left, we found California Overland online and learned that they were offering an overnight desert trip with astronomer Dennis Mammana on the night of the eclipse. I took this picture just as the moon was rising over the mountains on our way to the campsite.
This is Joe from California Overland.
Joe is every bit as cool as he looks and is one of my family's new favorite people. He organized our trip, cooked our meals, set up our tents, and was an amazing tour guide for the stunning alien landscape he calls home. Our tour started with a drive in a refurbished military vehicle to a spectacular spot called Font's Point, overlooking the Anzo Borrego Badlands. Joe walked us partway up a hill, then said, "Look down at your feet now, and keep walking toward my voice. Don't look up until I tell you to." We trusted Joe by then, so we did this. When he told us to look up, we were at the edge of a cliff looking out at this view.
As the sun went down and the moon came up, we headed to our campsite, near an old homestead that's been swallowed up by sand dunes and tamarack trees. The tents were already set up, and Joe started cooking dinner. Joe, it turns out, is a better cook in the middle of the desert than I am in my own fully-equipped kitchen. Without running water or electricity or anything but an open fire, he whipped up grilled steak, herb-rubbed salmon, roasted corn on the cob, and a beautiful salad with greens and goat cheese. I like food a lot, so Joe was especially my hero then.
Astronomer Dennis Mammana joined us for dinner and then went off to set up his telescope away from the light of the fire. When the lunar eclipse started in the early hours of the morning, we dozed in a circle of camp chairs around the telescope and took turns snapping pictures through its lens.
The full moon lit the desert so completely that we didn't need flashlights when it first came up, but as the eclipse began, that light faded into a darkness blacker than any sky I've ever seen.
And then there were stars. Stars like I've never even imagined. Anzo Borrego has been named one of the best star-watching spots in the country, and now I know why. Dennis turned his telescope every few minutes to point out something new. Jupiter with four moons clearly visible. The Andromeda Galaxy. And my favorite... The Orion Nebula, where new stars are born. And of course, all the while, there was the moon...
This was my last eclipse photo...taken after a 4am hike through the sand with Joe and my son, looking for scorpions and sidewinders. We didn't find any but enjoyed the quiet and the stars all the same. At about 5:30 the need for a little sleep won out over my desire to see the rest of the moon appear.
When the sun came up, I took a walk away from the campsite a bit to check out the desert plants and see if I could find that elusive scorpion. Here's a shot looking back at our tents.
After a breakfast of toast, turkey bacon, and omelets with fresh vegetables, it was time to take down the tents. And guess who scuttled out from underneath our tent when we started folding it up...
My 11-year-old has wanted to see a scorpion ever since he read about desert animals when he was four or five, so this guy's appearance made his trip complete.
The kids were still itching to do some hiking, so the amazing Joe was kind enough to take us on a bonus trip to one of Anzo Borrego's incredible slot canyons.
The sandstone walls were just a couple feet apart in places, so this was like no other trail I've ever hiked. The temperature had crept up to 113 by the time we made it into the canyon, so we stopped often to find shade and drink water. It gave me a dramatic appreciation for how extreme the desert can be and a true respect for the wildlife and plants that survive in this climate.
As I type this, I'm back home at my desk, getting ready for the start of school in a couple days.
Fall comes early to the Champlain Valley. We woke up to a crisp 42-degrees today, so the desert dust and heat are miles and memories away.
But last night, when I realized I'd forgotten to get the mail, I stepped out into the dark. I looked up at the stars, fighting with our streetlights, and a part of me slipped away, back to my camp chair in Anzo-Borrego, home of the sky and the scorpions, and the stars.
Its not just the adversity that counts, its the preparation the character makes to confront the adversity that helps build suspense and gets the reader to participate.
Then its the reflection that comes after the adversity that builds the bridge to the character's emotional state.
Adversity doesn't have to come every scene. The ones that come before and after are just as important.
The biggest adversity I face?
Waking up everyday.
Giving up trying to fit in and starting to find places I fit, instead!
Probably a major thread of the YA I'm working on. :)
The death of my father and two dogs.
Another great plot tip, Martha--to go beyond the standard "villain" in creating conflict and delve into all types of conflicts between the character and their environment. Sure heightens the tension (and potential loss...which is why we read!)
In my life - having to start over. My ms(s) all have that theme now that I think about it. The characters have lost the definition of their lives and now have to find themselves when the circumstances are challenging.
As I was finishing up my mainstream rough draft, I received THE CALL!!! And it was for something different than where I was heading, but something I am passionate about. Am waiting for another phone call. Amazing!!!
Hugs, JJ
Any successful novel or short story must have an element of adversity, it's what makes it work.
There may be a theme to the overall plot such as moving into a haunted house - which in itself is an adversity. However, what if the new owner of the house is a recovering drug or alcohol addict with enough ghosts of his/her own to deal with never mind the ghosts he/she is now co-habiting with.
Every story must contain an element of adversity. But your characters must also face adversity, it's what makes them human.
Thank you for commenting, all you wonderful people.
Anonymous, what you write is key and something I'm exploring myself right now. Thanks for you insights.
Poetry and prose, I feel for you.
Becky, what a perfect goal -- finding places you fit. Let me just tell you that you'll always fit with me!!!
Wonderful YA thread to explore.......
Anonymous, I feel for you.
Thanks, Beth. Yes, a standard villain, can be just that -- standard / thus -- cliche????
And, what, JJ, was the CALL??? I am so excited for you. Nice when we explore that which is difficult only to find a "payoff" for the hard work done.
Jon, I love your ghost house with a character haunted by their own ghosts!!
So fun to hear from everyone. Thanks for taking the time. And, it's not just me thanking you, it's all the other writers who may not themselves comment, but learn and grow from those of you willing to go out on a limb and comment.......
When I read the first line I was blown away. “Adversity does not build character, it reveals it” and I thought, Wow, that’s so true of everyday life, and then I read further in your post. You outline the development of character perfectly, and even though, as I’ve mentioned in the past, I’m not one for developing characters off the page, I must agree with your points in every way.
Even for writers like myself who develop characters “On the fly” to remember just that first line of your post is an important, and powerful thing- A fantastic post that’s leading to me going back further through your back catalog, Thanks = )
BT, I can't believe I came up with the intro quote myself. I must have heard it somewhere and it stuck -- mainly because it had a similar impact on me that it seems to have had on you.
Thanks for your kind words.
martha
My biggest adversity is overcoming my crippling belief that what I write doesn't matter, that no one will want to read it.
Martha, I have a prominent literary agent.:D WOOT! Should hear more news soon. It's hard waiting.
Hugs, JJ
My 39-year-old husband had a massive heart attack and nearly died. It taught both of us to live each day and make the most of it - it's all we have.
Carlene
www.themysterystartshere.com
visit my mystery blog!
Dear Martha,
Great question. The greatest adversity for my protagonist would be her own self-doubts. Antagonists appear, but, really, it's her not believing that she "can" or that she "deserves," which leads her to disaster. By the way, recently I watched both your Plot Planner and Scene Tracker (VHS!) over 2 days; both sessions helped me tremendously; gave me a fresh look at my project. Even though I have your book, and I've been fortunate to have gone to your workshops and received private consultations, and had sold my first novel because of your tutelage, the tapes were valuable because I could "pause" and work at my own pace. You are awesome; I wish I could put you on my shoulder whenever I sit down to write.
Martha, just stopping by to say hello and commend you on the wonderful stuff here. I'll definitely be back!
my loving family and friends are my greatest adversities when it comes to my writing. no one likes it when i'm writing. they'd rather i be with them
love this post. -remembering my prayers:
dear God,
please stop building.
amen.
(have added your blog to my rounds martha -great meeting you. love your book. will stay in touch)
love, ~sandra
Heart wrenching adversity -- our ability to discount our gifts, play small, believe in the darkness over the light.
JJ -- I hope you'll share your great news when it comes!! What a thrill........
Tragedy strikes. Out of the ashes comes the gift of every moment.
Thank you, Teresa, for your generous words. The universal struggle to count.
Anonymous, your loving family friends are giving you the opportunity to practice standing up for yourself and protecting your writing time......
Thanks to the rest of you for your kind words........
Happy plotting.........