We had a really great group at the Writers' Cafe on Wednesday. Rather than having a particular topic this time, we decided to ask people to bring a 2 minute reading of something they;'d written. The idea was partly to get to know each other better, and partly to see what genres we were writing in, and whether there were people writing in similar genres who'd like to pair up and work with each other as editor, mentors, and general encouragers. (OK, that's not a word, but you know what I mean.)
The results were interesting.
First, we decided that 2 minutes wasn't quite long enough. And that isn't because we're all narcissists who love to hear ourselves read aloud. (That's just me.) On the other hand, if we'd had a larger group of people reading (we were about 12 people with 9 people brave enough to read) there might not have been time for everyone. We read without explaining what we were reading, when we'd written it, what it was about, and which genre it was in (memoir, fiction, journalism, essay, etc).
We had two writers who were writing memoirs that involved travel, two essays, one journalism piece, two short fiction pieces, and two memoirs.
As it turned out, when it came to bragging time, many people were writing in more than one genre.
Margaret Rumford had a story accepted for the Winter issue of Mused.
Jane Sherman is editing her memoir
Sally Allen is now Westport editor of Hamlet Hub www.hamlethub.com
What she didn't mention (probably because she didn't want to pay the dollar...) is that she also has a great book blog on Open Salon: http://open.salon.com/blog/sally_allen
Robert Steven Williams has had another article published at the Good Men Project. Read it here: http://goodmenproject.com/ethics-values/money-and-the-moral-compass/
Tricia Tierney sent out two query letters to agents this month regarding her memoir here's her blog: http://triciatierneyblog.com/
Ina is working on a piece about how she found out that her mother had been married before for a New York publication
Margaret Wagner wrote a guest blog on branding for a foodie blog.
Catherine Onyemelukwe is halfway through writing a book proposal and a memoir.
And I finished my NaNoWriMo horrible draft of a first novel, and came second in the EChook 'Tis the Season story contest. Find out how to submit your work here: http://echook.com/submissions/.
Finally, we took a vote on where to continue our meetings, and the overwhelming choice was Ina's house, where her welcome make me, for one, feel like I'm in some famous salon. And the coffee's good too.
So the next meeting will be on DECEMBER 14 - that's only two weeks away. Ina's address is 2 Redcoat Road, Westport. The time is 12.30-2.
In the meantime, keep writing!