Today, I am very excited to have a guest post from another very talented writer and blogger in which she tells her writing story. I did a post for her blog on the same topic, which you can read here.
Abrielle Lindsay
Seattle is a girl with a hunger for a document, a nice, good book, or an
excuse to use Pinterest. She writes all kinds of Christian YA books, though all
are still being written or are in the first draft stage. She probably reads too
much, but, hey, shouldn't everyone?
Abrielle Lindsay blogs at Ravens and Writing
Desks (ravensandwriting.blogspot.com) with a couple writing friends and Books,
Books, Books! (thebooksbooksbookblog.blogspot.com). She lives in Papua,
Indonesia.
How I started writing? I can remember the
day fairly well, though I’m not in love with the years that followed.
The day that I started writing was when I
was in second grade, I believe, and had a journal assignment where I could
write anything I wanted. I had been
quite excited about the one. I was flipping through a drawing book to see who I
was going to write about. (That’s where I always found my “character
inspiration”) And I landed on a chimpanzee. Thus Benny and Sandey were born
(BTW, that’s Sandy with a ‘E’ added in) and their world .
I wrote on that over the weekend and was
allowed to continue for several weeks. The book ended with five chapters and
more pictures than paragraphs. I was proud of it, I admit (though I don’t feel
exactly the same way now…) and when typed up it ended up at about 32 pages—with
space of course for all of those pictures.
From that point on, I knew that I was going
to be a writer. When I got a journal for Christmas a month or two later, I
started to write Benny and Sandey’s background and history (how they met; how
lonely they were when vacations took place; etc.). I was very surprised when I
drew no pictures in this book—it just seemed better without them (and believe
me, they are).
Then I moved Indonesia four months later, I
hadn’t finished the first chapter Benny and Sandey’s second book (and it still
lies like that). I have always been in love with reading—as most authors
are—and I started to read even more while we were in Java.
I realized how great and genius these books
were. And I decided to copy them. Yeah, copy. I’m pretty ashamed. *ducks
head low* I started several—all too numerous to count for even me. None were
ever finished (and hopefully never will be), but I still have all those
notebooks stuffed on my shelf.
My writing slowed down for a while with the
weight of school and playing outside with my Indonesian friends. But then one
day a new idea hit me with, yes, another journal assignment. I think it was
called Under My Bed: Where things
came alive when they were set under a girl’s bed. I again drew more pictures
than writing on the pages—but I liked it.
I think I might have actually made it to
chapter three, and then I got some major writer’s block and put it away. Then I
moved to Papua and wasn’t writing.
Writing was put at the back of my mind, I
wasn’t going to write. I instead fed myself with numerous books, so many I’ve
lost count. I mean, my day seemed to be wake up, eat, do school, eat, finish
school, read, eat, read, sleep. During that phase of my
life I got in trouble for reading too much. Being told that I should do
something else.
Well, I was like that for about a year.
Getting in trouble because of the reading habits I had developed. January and
February of 2013 went by fast and then two of my friend recommended the books
series to me called Pet Trouble (which
I totes recommend too).
After long weeks of being tormented of how
good they were and how I should go to the library and check them out, I did.
And oh my gosh, that was the best choice of
my life. After reading Mud-Puddle
Poodle, I just knew that I had to write a contemporary book. I
just knew it.
But, I was by then ashamed about copying
other books, and so I didn’t know what to write.
I sat with a new notebook for about an hour
with a pen in hand. What was this story supposed to be about? How could I write
a book that wasn’t copied?
It seemed impossible at first, but then it
struck me. An unpopular girl who wants friends and the main part in a play.
Ok, that doesn’t sound brilliant now, but it
sure did when I knew nothing about writing. And thus I began writing about
Carla Jane and Beth.
I started writing about Carla Jane every night.
Every night. I was probably about
*shrugs* 32 pages into the story when something snapped inside of me and sent a
message to my brain saying, ‘What am are you doing, TW? This is ridiculous.’
And my writing went downhill—again.
About
two weeks later I was scrolling through Britt’s blog, Daughter of the King (one
of the best blogs ever, by the way) and saw a button to Go Teen Writers. I
thought, ‘Huh, I should go there,’
I clicked the link, and that was even better
than checking out the Pet Trouble series!
The blog was ok and it seemed to have two authors who knew what they were doing.
But I wasn’t interested… until I read a post two day later saying they were
going to have a writing contest.
Then I was grinning at the computer. I
entered, didn’t win, but entered. Got feedback that only encouraged me to write
a little more.
BUT. That’s not all. They were going to have
a WRITING RETREAT about a month later. I was up for that, I started writing again
and was surprised at how easy Carla Jane’s flowed.
The writing retreat proved to be very
encouraging. A couple people read the first six or seven chapters of my book
and said they liked it. That encouraged me even more.
(BTW, I totes recommend GTW (Go Teen Writers) for writers, it was no mistake that I was whisked away there ;)
I finished the first draft about two weeks
later, then immediately started book two.
So. My writing journey is probably different
than most, but I lived, but am very glad that I love writing so much now.
(And for the record, I no longer write in
notebooks or at night, I get up at 5 am and write my books on the computer)
Thank you Monica for having me, and sorry
for those who are reading it and thinking that I like to talk too much, because
it’s true. ;) Thanks again! You can check out Monica’s post that she did for my
blog here: How I Started Writing *By Monica*
Thanks for coming, Abrielle!
AGAIN, thanks for having me, Monica!! It was lots of fun! :D
ReplyDeleteTW Wright
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