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Paperback Writer: A Bakersfield, California literature, music and news blog

Women on the edge, writing from the edge – By Melinda Carroll



On one of my weekly treks to the Noveltown postal hub where big puffy packages arrive full of books, I opened Women on the Edge Writing from Los Angeles, edited by Samantha Dunn and Julianne Ortale. Dunn sent the book of short stories for N.L. Belardes of Noveltown to read and review. Good thing he never got the chance.

The title, Women on the Edge, and the Andy Warhol-style pop art faces of the women authors on the book cover called out to me as if they knew what I needed to know: revelations in writing and life from women writers.

I discovered compelling literary stories from women who have experienced hard lives, emotional times, strange events, unexpected turns and twists, and women who were unafraid to face obstacles. After reading such haunting stories I can easily say Belardes is not getting this book back.



Janet Fitch, author of White Oleander, wrote the foreword for Women on the Edge.

I pondered one of her quotes:

“Out here on the perimeter, there are no stars. Out here we is stoned, immaculate.”~The Doors, from L.A. Woman

Not a huge Doors fan, I wondered how a rock music quote could encapsulate women on the edge, writing from the edge. With each story I read, the subtle nuances, the profound moments, the hard emotions, and Fitch’s words in the foreword about these stories and women authors echoed true. Women on the Edge stories were about women at varying stages of life experiencing the beauty of life at its messiest.

I found myself living through the characters as if their experiences were my own. I understood Mrs. Poovey’s need to feel useful and needed again in Julianne Ortale’s Milk, and Debbie’s ostracization as a school girl in Aimee Bender’s Debbieland, or having to put a grandmother away in a home in Dylan Landis’ Rose, or wanting to know if love is somewhere in your future in Liz Gonzalez’s Destiny, and dealing with the loss of a loved one in Jody Hauber’s Between the Dog and the Wolf. These were stories from the heart about women whom I felt I was or had been at some point in my life.



The characters haunted me. So did the writing. I was just as enthralled with the language, beautiful prose and fine sentences expertly disguised within the hard, dark and emotional circumstances of each story.

In the end, I realize the beauty of Women on the Edge is the stories within tell a tale of what it is to be a woman. And that story links the contributing women authors and characters to women everywhere out on the edge, which is life.


Samantha Dunn - Photo by: Lupe Fernandez

You will want to read these stories!

Women on the Edge Writing from Los Angeles
Authors/Stories:
Karen Horn, Levinium 241
Julianne Ortale, Milk
Erin Julia McGuire, Crowfeathers
Aimee Bender, Debbieland
Samantha Dunn, Going Green
Lindsay Fitzgerald, Hunger
Dylan Landis, Rose
Lisa Teasley, Magda in Rosarito, Beached
Lisa Glatt, Ludlow
Abby Mims, Me and Mr. Jones
Michelle Latiolais, Boys
Rachel Resnick, Meat-Eaters of Marrakesh
Liz Gonzalez, Destiny
Anita Santiago, Flying Blind
Carol Muske-Dukes, Contraband
Rochelle Low, Where Angels Tread
Jody Hauber, Between the Dog and the Wolf
Mary Rakow, The Memory Room

Recently, I had the opportunity to talk with Samantha Dunn about Women on the Edge Writing from Los Angeles and how this wonderful collection of short stories came together.

Read the interview:

Noveltown: Women on the Edge Writing from Los Angeles are an eclectic collection of short stories. As an editor, how was the process of bringing all of these amazing stories together in one collection?

Samantha Dunn: The process? Like herding cats. Neither Julianne, my good friend and co-editor, nor I are particularly administrative-minded, and trying to wrangle writers—solitary, nonconformist types in general—is never an easy task. We were also working on a tight deadline and a shoestring budget, so we began our calls to writers with lines like, “Hi, we can’t give you hardly any money and we need it tomorrow, but can we print your story, pretty please?” Happily, all the women were really supportive of our idea for the collection and very cooperative. It was truly a joy getting these stories and feeling that we were discovering some great new material, or giving more exposure to incredible stuff that maybe had not been seen as much as it should.



Noveltown: Were the short stories for Women on the Edge handpicked or was there an open submission process?

Samantha Dunn: It wasn’t an open submission process in that we did not print a notice in literary magazines or other such places, and we didn’t have a long lead time that would have allowed us to edit pieces that had potential but weren’t quite “there” yet. We relied on our own email lists and word-of-mouth to attract material; in some instances I asked for specific pieces, like Aimee Bender’s spectacular “Debbieland” and Karen Horn’s beautiful work, “Levinium 241.” I think I called Lisa Glatt and just said “Just give me something,” knowing that anything she did would fall in the spectrum of what Julianne and I had in mind. We had in our heads a certain idea of what we wanted; a tone, if you will, that we were seeking.

Noveltown: When Women on the Edge Writing from Los Angeles arrived in the mail I saw the title and immediately thought these are I-am-woman-hear-me-roar stories. There was no heavy dose of feminist extremism, though the stories captured womanhood. What I found were very well crafted literary short stories that touched me unexpectedly. How do you think the title of the collection reflects the short stories within?

Samantha Dunn: This is trenchant question and one I appreciate, but it’s hard for me to answer succinctly. OK, first let me say I find that writing labeled “feminist” is often lugubrious in nature, limited, stale, and reflects nothing of the concerns and attitudes of myself or the women I know. Julianne and I were looking for stories that somehow captured the essence of our experience of life itself—off kilter, messy, beautiful, uplifting, heartbreaking, at times transcendent and other times just plain weird.

Noveltown: While reading Women on the Edge I found common themes within the stories. Was there a particular theme or themes you looked for as an editor while choosing stories?

Samantha Dunn: Uhm…you did? Did they have anything to do with what I just said in the last question? Hope so.

Noveltown: Do you have a favorite short story from Women on the Edge? Can you reveal your favorite? If so, what about the story moves you most?

Samantha Dunn: This is the “Mother, which child do you like the best?” question. And of course I will admit to nothing other than to say I love them all for different reason, while the savvy reader will suspect I do have my favorites. I will tell you that the story “Levinium 241” is the reason for the whole collection. Years and years ago I had been in a workshop, which the writer Karen Horn was a part of, and I had been so taken with the story. I really had never gotten it out of my head, I guess because it combined all the elements that make an interesting story for me—a deep emotional stake, breathtaking insights, no easy answers, and all of it wrapped in beautiful language. Anyway, Karen, for whatever reason, never pursued publication and so the story had stayed in the drawer all these years. I always thought that was a shame.

Well, along comes a phone call from Matthew Miller, publisher of the Toby Press, the small, independent publisher who put out my novel Failing Paris, asking if I would be interested in putting together a collection of my short stories. I didn’t have enough for my own collection at the time, but I thought about Karen, and my friend Julianne, who is truly an incredible, undervalued literary talent, and that led me to think about putting together a collection that would highlight these kinds of difficult, offbeat but generally brilliant stories. Matthew, bless him, was totally up for it. Thankfully Julianne was game to be my co-editor, because as a graduate of the University of California at Irvine’s MFA program, I knew she’d seen a lot of talent I didn’t know about, and I knew we shared the same literary tastes.

Noveltown: Do you feel like you’re writing from the edge as Janet Fitch’s forward suggests?

Samantha Dunn: Oh hell yes.

Noveltown: As a woman writer and the editor of this collection of stories what advice would you give other women writers striving to achieve the quality and style of writing within Women on the Edge?

Samantha Dunn: Alas, all I can impart is bumper-sticker wisdom…you know, the whole “dance like no one is watching,” “lead with your heart” thing. But, honestly, all cornball catch phrases aside, I think good writing is like that. Most every one of the writers in this collection has toiled a long time, alone in a room, writing not because she was making any money, attracting big readerships or becoming famous, but because she felt compelled to this form of expression. And because she loved literature. These writers also have apprenticed themselves to the process of becoming writers, studying, putting ego and everything else on the line just for that one satisfying (often transitent) sentence, or a scene well rendered, or sometimes merely the joy of finding the perfect word.

Noveltown: Would you ever edit another collection of short stories?

Samantha Dunn: I would if the stars were aligned again, if I had the same kind of control I had in this one, sure. Of course I would also skydive, motorcycle without a helmet, drink the water in Mexico and tattoo my husband’s name on my holiest of holy, so I’m maybe not the best person to ask about appropriate behavior.

Noveltown: Are you working on any projects now? What’s on the horizon for Samantha Dunn?

Samantha Dunn: I’m writing something now but I don’t quite know what it is yet. I just want to get back to language and ideas. I’m in screenplay recovery. My last book was purchased by Lifetime for an original movie and I got the job to co-write with a professional screenwriter. I went in with no small amount of hubris, thinking that since I have put out six books—two ghostwritten for other people—and umpteen magazine pieces I could just slip into the screenwriting world. What actually happened was kind of like the artistic equivalent of a smackdown on Saturday night wrestling.

Noveltown: Thanks for hanging out with Noveltown and discussing Women on the Edge.

Samantha Dunn: Thank you all so much. Bakersfield, literary hotbed. I love it! Y’all are on your own edge…

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Samantha Dunn - Photo by: Lupe Fernandez

Samantha Dunn is the author of Failing Paris (Toby Press), a finalist for the PEN West Fiction Award in 2000, and the memoir, Not By Accident: Reconstructing a Careless Life (Henry Holt& Co.), a BookSense 76 pick. Her most recent memoir, Faith in Carlos Gomez: A Memoir of Salsa, Sex and Salvation, is published by Henry Holt & Co. Her work is anthologized in a number of places, including the short story anthology, Women on the Edge: Writing from Los Angeles (Toby Press), which Dunn co-edited with writer Julianne Ortale. Dunn's essays have appeared in numerous national publications.

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Yosemite Writers Conference: The writers New Year - By Melinda Carroll

In trying to sum up my experience at the Yosemite Writers Conference I thought I’d share a few of the memorable sentiments, phrases and writing advice that really resonated with me.

“Art is a lie that makes us realize the truth,” ~Pablo Picasso, “and that is fiction” ~Ginny Rorby

“Sheroes” (women heroes) ~Brenda Knight

“You can change what people think with your writing.” ~N.L. Belardes

“Social networking is a way to raise awareness.” ~N.L. Belardes

“Write from the heart, write what’s around you, write the truth of hidden history” ~Brenda Knight

“Make writing a practice, make it a priority” ~Kate Gale

“You want to aspire to write great work.” ~Kate Gale

“You have to make your book stand out.” ~Farrin Jacobs

“Write the novel you want to write.” ~Steve Yarborough

“Your voice is important. Use your voice to capture attention for yourself, use your voice as a community service.” ~N.L. Belardes

“It really was inspiring. Felt like the writer's New Year for me.” ~Genevieve Choate

“One of the things you achieve from a point of view character is VOICE.” ~Hallie Ephron

“Movies have ruined more fiction writers.” ~David Morrell

“The most important thing in a book should be tension.” ~Irene Webb

“Be a first rate version of yourself not a second rate version of someone else.” ~David Morrell

“Develop an identity for yourself as a writer.” ~David Morrell

“Never underestimate the emotion of jealousy.” ~Bonnie Hearn Hill

“You can have a literary voice and still tell a good story.” ~Bonnie Hearn Hill

“Writing well is the best revenge.” ~David Morrell

“Always remember the enthusiasm with which the idea struck you.” ~David Morrell

More on the 2007 Yosemite Writers Conference:

Yosemite Writers Conference: The Writers New Year
Is Book Publishing Dead? Yosemite Writers Conference provides food for hungry writers
Yosemite Writers Conference: A Conversation about Blogging
Rambo Creator Reinvents Captain America
Yosemite Writers Conference: Demystifying Chick lit and Women’s fiction
Yosemite Writers Conference: Poetry talk
Mystery talk after David Morrell's big speech
2007 Yosemite Writers Conference: Brenda Knight Sidesteps the TVA man
Yosemite Writers and the Chukchansi bathroom break
Headed to Yosemite Writers Conference to talk writing for social change

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Read Noveltown’s experiences at last year’s Yosemite Writer’s Conference:

By N.L. Belardes
A Writer in Yosemite: Part One
A Writer in Yosemite: Part Two
A Writer in Yosemite: Part Three
A Writer in Yosemite: Part Four
A Writer in Yosemite: Part Five
A Writer in Yosemite: Part Six
A Writer in Yosemite: Part Seven
A Writer in Yosemite: Part Eight

By Matildakay
A great literary weekend
What's your type?
How to Approach a Literary Agent...
The Mary Wong Lee Memorial Scholarship
Malcolm Margolin is Posh
Hanging out with the Pirates of Yosemite and setting the record straight
Kill Your Darlings

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Schedule for the Yosemite Writers Conference – By Melinda Carroll

In a recent interview with Bonnie Hearn Hill about the Yosemite Writers Conference, she stated:

“We have four workshops an hour geared for everyone at every stage of her/his career; however, we encourage writers to follow their passion. If a beginning writer wants to attend a workshop on how to sell books to film, that’s fine. I should add that we have a talented sound professional from Hawaii recording all of the workshops, so if you miss one you think you might like, you can purchase a CD.”

Wow! That’s a lot of workshops! And there are a lot of great topics being covered! There are a couple of timeslots where I wish I could clone myself and sit in two workshops at the same time. I just might have to purchase a CD of the workshops so I don’t miss anything.

Take a look at the schedule of workshops for next week’s Yosemite Writers Conference:

Friday August 24:

9:15 – 10:15 AM
Sharpen Your Hooks – Fiction
Writing For Social Change
Writing and Publishing Your Memoir
Writing Anthologies For the Soul

10:45 – 11:45 AM
Ghosting Where the Money is: A Guide to Co-authoring
How to Stand Out in the Nonfiction Market
Selling to Chronicle Books
Editing Poetry: Entering the process whole and coming out humming

1:45 – 2:45 PM
All About Platform: If You Build It, They Will Come
Spiritual Writing in the Age of The Secret
Selling to Tor Books
Chick Lit is Dead, and Other Myths About Women's Fiction

3:00 – 4:00 PM
How to Pitch an Editor
Rates, rights and rules of engagement: What you need to know about magazine freelancing
Selling to Weiser Books
Take Your Book to the Movies

Saturday August 25:

9:15 – 10:15 AM
He, She and the Dreaded Omniscient: Point of View at Close Range
Confessions of a Contest Judge
Picture Book Manuscript Critique
Beyond the Basics - What Every Author Needs to Know Before, During and After Publication

10:45 – 11: 45 AM
Sharpen your Hooks – Nonfiction
Blogging Your Way to Fame

1:45 – 2:45 PM
How to Pitch an Agent
Murder, They Wrote: A Guide to Mystery, Suspense & Thrillers
Writing for Guideposts

3:00 – 4:00 PM
Tapping the Hot YA Market
Invisible Genius: Ghostwriting for The Penn Group
Twisting the Mystery Plot

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www.noveltown.net
www.yosemitewriters.com

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Ain’t got that writing feeling? – By Melinda Carroll

You’re a writer, you sit down at the computer to write, but nothing happens. The prose isn’t pouring from your fingertips onto the page. You’re frustrated. You can’t find any inspiration. You’re not motivated. You just don’t feel like writing.

Most writers have experienced a lack of writing energy at one time or another. I know I have. Salon.com has some good advice for writers needing motivation.

“You know, to me it seems possible that all the dire things you imagine could be true, and you could still write. You might very well be lazy, afraid of failure and undisciplined and still write. You might lack the urge and still write. You might not be a writer and still write. After all, a writer is just someone who writes. If you're writing, you're writing. It's a verb.

As a writer, you are dependent on others. Why should you believe that you can write without any external stimulus? If you need to meet with a writers group, enroll in a class, arrange with a mentor or writing friend to share work on agreed-upon deadlines, or if you need to work out a schedule of deadlines with your editor or agent, then please do so. This is often the case. The idea that a writer works only from inner inspiration is, I think, a bit of a romantic myth, rooted in the idea of writer as solitary and mysterious hero. The writer may be that, but he is also a person in a web of community, and he is also fallible. He may be lazy and unable to meet deadlines; he may be, as I am, fearful of completion. So there is nothing wrong with building into your life some structures that compensate for your weaknesses. We are not supermen. We all need a little help.

There will be times that you have to write even though you don't feel like it. In that sense, writing is like your other roles in life: It requires you to do things you don't want to do. You do it because that is your role.”

(Read the full article)

So Writers, treat writing as a role in your life. Something you have to do instead of a talent you use when you feel like it. Writing is a verb after all. And Noveltown is waiting for your finished manuscripts.

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Writer’s Digest says creative lollygagging is the cure for writer’s block - By Melinda Carroll

Writer’s block. Every writer experiences it. Staring at a blank notebook or computer screen, waiting, waiting, for the light bulb to go off over your head. Waiting for that brilliant idea that will be the next great American novel. How do you combat writer’s block? How do you make those brilliant ideas form in your head and find their way onto the page?

Michael J. Vaughn states in an article for Writer’s Digest that creative lollygagging is the cure for writer’s block.

“Picture yourself as a satellite dish. The way a dish receives signals is a decidedly passive activity, but nothing comes in until the equipment is properly charged and opened to the universe. A few years ago, ensconced in one of my "brewing" modes—done with my last novel, waiting for the next to come a-knockin'—I decided to take my dish to the beach and open 'er up…

If you subtly stimulate your other senses—in this case, tactile (the glass) and auditory (the ocean)—you can take the "edge" away from your conscious, purposive mind, return the satellite dish to a state of active passivity and open yourself to the forces of serendipity. And if you come to the beach for frosted glass, you'll also get ideas for your story, slipping in along your peripheral vision.”

(Read the full article, which includes a creative lollygaggers to-do list and the coffee house ritual).

Now quit staring at your blank computer screen, get to lollygagging and be creative. Your next great novel, and Noveltown’s, could be outside literally lying on the ground.

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