One question writers are often asked is, “Where do you get your ideas?” In this series of posts, I’m hoping to introduce you to authors to honor their work and to explain their creative process to curious readers. Here’s Teri Rizvi, journalist and essayist, whose recent publication is ONE HEART WITH COURAGE: ESSAYS AND STORIES. “I’m a journalist by training, so I’m...
Where Do You Get Your Ideas? Introducing Fictional Memoirist Sylvia Petter
I’ve started a series of blogposts both to (1) support other authors and to (2) answer a common question readers ask: Where do you get your ideas? Here is an introduction to Sylvia Petter, author of ALL THE BEAUTIFUL LIARS, who tells us where she got the ideas for her fictional “memoir.” “It won’t leave you alone,” her mother said of the story that took Petter 20 years to write...
THE ROAR and THE STENCH
On January 21, 2017, thousands of women descended on the nation’s capital, arriving by plane, by bus, by car, by motorcycle, by skateboard, by foot. They were wearing sneakers and sandals, Crocs and Doc Martens, Army boots and orthopedic shoes. They carried backpacks and fanny packs, cell phones and water bottles, even babies in slings. They had heard a newly inaugurated President proclaim that...
ON THE MARCH: The Roar Heard ‘Round the World
THE ROAR HEARD ‘ROUND THE WORLD -“And then the most astonishing thing happened: The crowd began to roar. The roaring came in a rolling wave, gathering at the far edges of the crowd and then sweeping to the front. It was a tsunami gathering force deep in the ocean of history and then plunging across the world, its beaches, its cities, its farmlands, its mountains, sweeping the entire globe. It...
BEST BOOKS about Growing Up in the Jim Crow South
Thank you, Ben Sheperd, for including me on your list of BEST BOOKS About Growing Up in the Jim Crow South. I remember the separate drinking fountains, the separate restrooms, the separate theatre seats, even the separate cemeteries. So, too, do the authors of the books that accompany Ben’s feature of my book, SPITE FENCES. I’m blessed to be in the company of Colson Whithead, Toni...
Where Do You Get Your Ideas? Introducing Author Julie Gallagher
At book signings, festivals, and – yes, even the grocery store – readers always ask an author “Where Do You Get Your Ideas?” The question always puzzles me because ideas are everywhere! They can come from memories, fleeting observations, even dreams. Remember when Proust sampled that madelaine? It triggered one memory and launched an entire literary style! My own writing...
Me – and TV? A Conversation with Trudy Krisher
We writers sit behind desks a lot. Not in front of cameras. So it was with some hesitation that I agreed to have Ruth Anne Peck interview me for her Book-TV show, The Writer’s Nook. The occasion was the publication of two new books: A scholarly biography (FANNY SEWARD: A LIFE) and a children’s picture book (‘AN AFFECTIONATE FAREWELL’: THE STORY OF OLD ABE AND OLD BOB)...
Children’s Early Readers – and Me
I was recently asked to submit an article to a children’s book forum. The forum was featuring beginning readers for children. Why me? I had only written one early reader – BARK PARK! – so I wondered why I’d been asked. After all, I usually write novels (SPITE FENCES; KINSHIP; UNCOMMON FAITH; FALLOUT) and I’d written a scholarly biography with scads of footnotes...
The Caged Bird: A Tribute to Paul Laurence Dunbar
The main character of one of my novels is nicknamed “Birdie.” Short for “Alberta.” Birdie has been named after her father. Like many Ericas, Claudias, and Robertas, sons had been expected for Eric, Claudia, and Robert. As well as Albert. Creating Birdie got me thinking about how many writers make use of birds in their work. Birds inhabit book titles as mockingbirds and goldfinches. They nest...
AUNT JEMIMA, BAND-AIDS, and THE SIMPSONS: Learning About Micro-Aggressions
BLACK LIVES MATTER is a significant slogan for me. It reminds me that I have much to learn. As a white person, I have been struggling to walk in the shoes of black-and-brown people to learn about the many ways in which daily life reminds them that they don’t matter. I have noticed these things through what are called micro-aggressions. I don’t know what a dictionary calls them...
