Thursday, March 7, 2013

March 12 Meeting Details

                                                            

March 12, 2013
12 - 1 p.m. at FamilyLife
 
Helen Austin 

Proofing and Editing

Helen Austin

Helen Austin was food editor at the Arkansas Democrat for six years and has since been a contributor to Active Years and the Arkansas Times. Some of her true stories have been published in Tales from the South.

                                            Visitors are always welcome!

Saturday, February 9, 2013

February 12 LRACW Meeting Details

February 12, 2013
12-1 p.m. at FamilyLife
Madelyn Young
 
Mastering POV in Fiction

Madelyn Young

 
Arkansas author Madelyn F. Young's interactive presentation, “Mastering POV in Fiction,” will address the following topics:
  • The three basic kinds of literary point of view
  • The advantages and disadvantages of each kind
  • Choosing the right point of view for a story
  • Changing point of view within a story
  • Avoiding the most common errors when using point of view
  • Skillfully using dialogue and internalization to reveal point of view
Madelyn has won numerous state and local awards for her short stories, memoirs, and essays. Her book, Views from an Empty Nest: Award-Winning Tales Written after Fifty, was published early in 2012. In her collection of 20 fiction and 11 nonfiction tales, Madelyn shares stories of family loyalty and love, discord, and intrigue. She takes real-life experiences and transforms them into compelling accounts that sometimes take surprising twists in the end.

A retired teacher and school administrator, Madelyn is active in the Village Writers’ Club in Hot Springs Village where she lives with her husband, Robin. They have three children and five grandchildren.

To learn more about Madelyn and her writing, she invites you to visit her blog: http://southernstorylady.wordpress.com

Visitors are always welcome!

Thursday, January 10, 2013

From Sharecropper to the White House

By Carla Adair Hendricks



She entered the world a daughter of a poor Arkansas Delta sharecropper.

Decades later she worked in an office three doors down from President Bill Clinton.

Janis F. Kearney has risen to heights that her parents had dreamed for her, and on this past Tuesday, January 8, she shared her journey with the Little Rock American Christian Writers. In case you missed it, I thought I'd share her story here.

Before Janis began sharing the details of her life, she declared her calling to write. "Writing is what God called me to do. That's what I'm on earth to do."

Throughout her childhood, she used her hands to pick cotton in the hot fields of Gould, Arkansas. But she always knew that when she grew up she wanted to use her hands and her mind to impact her community and world.

Her parents -- her 106-year-old father is stilling living today -- encouraged her and her 18 brothers and sisters to dream of more prosperous lives for themselves. "The three lessons my parents taught us were hard work, education and faith."

It was in this spirit that she applied for a secretarial job one summer during her high school years with the late Daisy Bates (leader of the Little Rock Nine). She felt immediately drawn to Mrs. Bates, but unfortunately failed the typewriting test miserably. Though she didn't land the job, she says she knew the moment she met Mrs. Bates, that she was "in the presence of greatness."

Little did she know -- she and Daisy Bates would meet again.

Janis went on to major in journalism at the University of Arkansas, where she honed her writing craft. She graduated and moved on to a lucrative state government career, and continued that for nine years.

She was content and making a good living, but there was more she'd be called to do.

In 1984, Janis applied for a job with a local newspaper, the Arkansas State Press. The newspaper was owned by, none other than, Daisy Bates. Mrs. Bates and her husband were searching for a managing editor, and when Janis interviewed she reminded Mrs. Bates of their previous meeting years before.

This time Janis landed the job.

Things were going well until the Bates decided to sell the newspaper just months after Janis had quit her steady government job to join their staff. Janis was devastated, but thinking back on her parents' lessons of hard work and faith, she and her husband put in a bid for the Arkansas State Press.

Mrs. Bates turned down all other offers for the newspaper and accepted Janis', saying "I can see the fire in your belly."

That fire in her belly has ignited many experiences in Janis' life. In 1992, Janis began working with President Bill Clinton's campaign. And when he was elected the 42nd president of the United States, she followed him to the White House as his personal diarist.

This job was a dream come true. Her responsibility was to shadow the President throughout the day and write about his life. And write she did. One day her writings will be included in the annals of history in President Clinton's presidential library in Little Rock.

Janis reads from her presidential biography in 2006


Until then, Janis has published an award-winning memoir, Cotton Field of Dreams and a presidential  biography, Conversations: William Jefferson Clinton, From Hope to Harlem.

Oh, and she also founded her own publishing company, Writing Our World Press.

Janis has come a long way from the cotton fields of Gould.


Friday, January 4, 2013

Janis Kearney to speak at January 8 Meeting


Janis F. Kearney
Can't wait to hear Janis Kearney (left) speak at next Tuesday's meeting at FamilyLife (January 8).     

She'll tell us why she and her husband began WOW! Books, a micro-publishing company. And she will  also give us a glimpse into what she calls her "Alice in Wonderland" experience, being the personal diarist to President William Jefferson Clinton from 1995-2001.

Janis is the author of Cotton Field of Dreams: A Memoir.  She will have some of her books at the meeting, if you would like to purchase one.



 
             





 

Friday, December 14, 2012

A Christmas Treat: My First LRACW Meeting

By Dorothy Hill

Today was a first for me; my first meeting with other Christian writers in Little Rock. A friend on Facebook posted the meeting announcement for LRACW and I immediately started looking through the announcement for time, address and what to expect at the meeting.

When I arrived I was escorted to the meeting room, which really put me at ease. There is nothing worse than getting lost, being late and disrupting whatever might be going on when you finally figure out where you’re supposed to be. I’m so grateful that wasn’t my lot today.

And what do you know? Refreshments. Finger sandwiches (with no crusts!), chips and a fabulous dip, individual tart-sized ‘pies’ complete with whipped cream! Chex Mix, oh – and caramel corn. Such an unexpected bounty and so appreciated by all.

The writers at the meeting were so welcoming and friendly. They each made it a point to speak to me and introduce themselves. What a courteous and kind thing to do, to make a stranger feel so welcome. (Of course, without name tags next month, I won’t know who you are. And likely you wouldn’t know me either!)

Our speaker was Linda Scisson who talked about her new book, One-of-a-Kind Christmas Quiz. The book was available for purchase, which I did and now I can’t stop reading it. Clearly Linda knows a lot more about Christmas than I. This is an enjoyable read in a well organized book. The handout she provided for each of us was a glimpse into her book.

Linda spoke about her book and some of the decisions she made during the writing process. Very enlightening! Getting good counsel from an attorney was an excellent decision! She shared some publishing information that I think was very appropriate and useful. And I felt her pain when she mentioned the seemingly endless end-notes. I know who I’m going to talk to when I feel I’m ready to take that step toward publishing.

Linda’s book has 112 questions with multiple choice answers provided. I’m taking this book to our family Christmas morning brunch…and I’m going to Quiz my hubby and kids. I’m so glad there is an answer key in the back of the book. Without it I would be sunk.

I’m so looking forward to meeting on the 2nd Tuesday of the month. And oh yes, I’m going to the writers’ conference on May 18th at Summit Church in North Little Rock. Hope you’ll come join us!

Monday, December 10, 2012

Christmas @ LRACW: An Interview with Linda L. Scisson



Since our very own Linda L. Scisson will be sharing about her book, One-of-a-Kind Christmas Quiz at our LRACW Christmas party (tomorrow, December 11), we thought we'd share a little more about her with you. Read on to discover more about this Little Rock writer and her exciting Christmas book...

How long have you been writing?


I’m 62 years old, and I’ve enjoyed writing most of my adult life. A major milestone was in the early 1980s when I shared my poems with a psychiatrist, and she suggested I enroll in a poetry class. I’m so glad I took Dr. Rosemary Brandt’s suggestion. Those early poems eventually led me to a heightened appreciation of the things of God. That is, God started showing up, in some form or fashion, in my poems, and I recognized a deep longing to get to know Him. He is called “Wonderful Counselor,” you know, and He does not charge for therapy sessions.

Two decades later, I submitted my first article, sort of on a lark, to an online Christian magazine called Excel Online, which was an outreach of Fellowship Bible Church in Little Rock. “Seeing Ourselves in Seabiscuit” galloped into cyberspace in August 2003, and I received compliments from the editor, along with encouragement to continue to write and submit.

Are you originally from Arkansas?

 I grew up in Crossett, a small paper-mill town in Ashley County. I moved here after college graduation: The small-town girl moving to the big-city theme, as did my twin sister Brenda Scisson.


           Is One-of-a-Kind Christmas Quiz your first book?


One-of-a-Kind Christmas Quiz (Mustang, OK: Tate Publishing, 2012) is my first book to be marketed by someone other than myself. My contract with Tate included a marketing contract, and a marketing representative who gave me pointers and a gentle push to promote this book. I prefer the writing and research, rather than marketing, and Travis King understood that and did not push me into a place that would have been highly stressful for me.  

Yet, my first book —that I also had self-published, elsewhere — is Durables: Articles, Poems, and Reviews. I had a grand total of 230 copies printed, starting back in 2007. There was no official marketing, and I gave many copies away as gifts.

What inspired you to write this book?

I remember at my sister’s dining room table on Christmas Day, 2010, sharing a few Christmas quiz questions. And I knew I could compile all my questions from several years, and add some more, and turn it into a book. I had the desire to do so, and I chose to pursue it.

Also, I had a sense of failure with Durables. While I have a revised and expanded manuscript, I have not had the energy or the emotional stamina to do any more with it. And I translate that lack of mine as God’s prompting to close the door of Durables, which revised manuscript is a few yards from me (as I type my responses to these questions), housed in a three-ring, durable notebook.

So I turned to something lighter in scope.

And I had a sense there would be something unique about my Christmas quiz book: that it is one-of-a-kind, but ultimately the reader will determine that.

Have you used One-of-a-Kind Christmas Quiz with your own family?

I will speak about its use with family, in pertinent part, at our meeting on December 11. The basic answer is: Yes, I have used this book with family members.

Without a doubt, it has generated family fun and bonding. I recall one day after sharing one of the spiritual questions in One-of-a-Kind Christmas Quiz, one family member asked me a deeply theological question, and I had to suggest the inquiry be addressed to a pastor. I had little or no idea of the depth of this relative’s spiritual quest. 




Tuesday, November 20, 2012

December 11 LRACW Meeting Details

One of a Kind Christmas Quiz
We are going to be in for a real treat at our next LRACW Meeting. It will be held at FamilyLife on December 11. Our very own Linda Scisson will tell us about her brand new book, One-of-a-Kind Christmas Quiz.  I want to get a copy of this book for my family!
 
Everyone at the December meeting will get a list of members' favorite websites and blogs for writers. Please e-mail a list of your favorites to president@lracw.org. Thanks!
 
And finally, the news we've all been waiting for .... details about the 2013 LRACW Writers Conference. Well, that will be given at the December 11 meeting.
 
Have wonderful holidays,