Lit Lessons #17: The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie. Professional Groomer? Or Fizzy Educator?

Online Writing Lessons to Enhance Your Writing Skills “O where shall I find a virtuous woman, for her price is above rubies.” Proverbs 31:10 I knew The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie by Muriel Spark would be trouble when a writer wrote a hilarious text that read, “I want to claw my eyes out.” ???? ???? ???? True, it is extraordinarily hard to connect with this book and yet, if one can place this dark satire in the proper context, the story is chillingly familiar. First and foremost,...

Lit Lesson #16: Oh Pioneers by Willa Cather: Which Plot?

Unraveling the Plot of Oh Pioneers: Writing Classes for Adults …the time will come when she’ll be ranked above Hemingway. ~ Leon Edel “My God, girl,  what a head of hair!” he exclaimed, quite innocently and foolishly. She stabbed him with a glance of Amazonian fierceness and drew in her lower lip, most unnecessary severity… …and we are off on a story about Alexandra the only daughter of a Swedish farmer about to die. Alexandra was an unusual heroine of her...

Lit Lesson #15: Incorporating Feedback

Improve Your Writing: Creative Writing Courses for Beginners After that first time up to read, I developed a system of going through the commentary from Tom and the other writers page by page and transferring all their marks onto a my master set of pages. Praise. Typographical errors. Line edits. Everything. Next, I sat down and typed the feedback into my computer copy. If a suggestion bugged me, I didn’t cast it aside. Rather, I looked at this feedback a couple extra times to see what bugged...

Flight School Lit Lesson Submission Guidelines:

Writing Advice From Writers: Submission Guidelines “We write to taste life twice, in the moment and in retrospect.” ~ Anais Nin If you are on the path to becoming a published writer, Blackbird is devoted to supporting you with a format for publication: Flight School Lit Lessons. This isn’t just a blog, or newsletter (as some call it). This is a place to capture the teachings here at the Studio and bring them into concrete form. It is also a place for you to share your voice through...

Lit Lesson #14: God of Small Things

Best Writing Courses to Master Storytelling Never again will a single story be told as though it’s the only one. ~ John Berger This Berger quote opens The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy, a literary novel released in 1997 that went on to win the Booker Prize. It was Roy’s first book, and took her many years to write (you can certainly deduce this when you note her remarkable care and attention to detail and language). This post is the result of three weeks of conversation...

Lit Lesson #13: How Do I Get Published?

From Draft to Publication: The Value of Manuscript Review “…don’t worry about publication…”  ~ Abigail Thomas If I had a nickel for the number of times I’ve been asked this question, well, you know the rest. But it still comes at me year after year. “How do I get published?” It’s an important question, a necessary question, a bit of a driving-question because we writers want to cross that finish line. But often a writer asks the question...