Lawrence Block on the Late Late Show
I met Lawrence Block at a the Ragdale Foundation, a writer’s retreat outside of Chicago. He was there for a month and I was there for a week. I remember thinking, holy crap, it’s Lawrence Block! And he’s sitting at dinner right next to me! Holy Crap.
Okay. Not the most eloquent but I tend to get tongue-tied when I’m around celebrities. Lawrence Block has been one of my hero’s as a writer for a long long time. Besides writing wonderful mysteries like the classic Matt Scudder series (as hardboiled as you can get) he wrote two of my favorite books on writing, Spider Spin Me a Web, and Telling Lies for Fun and Profit. They are collections of his columns for Writer’s Digest when he was the fiction columnist. I read him religiously when I was younger. I use his writing techniques today.
That was the last retreat I was at before my son was born and I haven’t been back since but… I got a chance to speak to Larry a few times, hear him read from a new book he was working on, and talk about the difficult process of writing a memoir. He even defended me against some challenging critiques in the audience when I read my work. I write him an email every once in a while and I’m on his newsletter email list. I just got one the other day and wanted to share his interview on the Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson. It’s a howler. I mean, I was laughing my ass off. He’s a man of few speaking words (Larry, not Craig), well-chosen and taciturn. Watch him talk about his book and enjoy himself. He’s a great guy, a wonderful writer and 100% himself.
In the Half-Light Essay in Hunger Mountain
Hunger Mountain is a wonderful online magazine (and print in the fall), whose editor, Bethany Hegedus (who wrote the wonderful Between Us Baxters), asked me to write an essay for them on the development of Cid Wymann, the protagonist of Open Wounds, and a secondary character named Winston Arnolf Leftingsham (aka: Lefty). Hunger Mountain is both a print and online journal of the arts that publishes fiction, poetry, creative nonfiction, visual art, young adult and children’s writing, writing for stage and screen, interviews, reviews, and craft essays and I’m honored to have been selected by them to write this piece.
After a difficult birth (on my part) Bethany pulled my piece together with some great suggestions and trimming, and I have to say I’m pleased with the way it came out. The essay is called “In the Half-Light” and is in the current online edition which has just gone live. The first chapter of Open Wounds is also included in the issue. If you’d like some insight into the creation of these two characters, and my own creative process (yes, I do have one), then take a look.
Check out what Andrew Smith has been writing about how he develops characters in his blog Ghostmedicine.com for a look at how another author, and the writer’s who comment on his blog, look at the subject.
Two Interviews, A Sneak Peak, and a partridge in a pear tree…
Two big ones.
Sunday, May 22nd, 2:45pm EST – 3:15pm EST Big Blend Radio’s Champagne Sunday’s show with Lisa Smith, Nancy ?, and guest co-host Amy Friese. Here’s the link: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/big-blend-radio/2011/05/22/champagne-sundays. I’ll be talking about Open Wounds. Anyone can tune in.
Wednesday, May 25th, 1pm EST Tami Snow’s Lyrical Lip Service Radio Show. Here’s the url: http://lyricallipservice.com. Check in on the website to hear me talk about Open Wounds with Tami.
If you listen in, let me know what you think.
Hunger Mountain, an online magazine about writing and kids/YA/Children literature, is sneak peeking the first chapter of Open Wounds this month and my essay on writing, In the Half Light will be out by the end of the month. Check out what editor Bethany Hegedus has to say about the sneak peek. This is a great magazine for readers and writers so take a look at the other offerings too.
Philli MAGPI Redux
So here’s what happened at University of Penn, at ten in the morning on Wednesday last week. Well… I have to back up. After putting together my Powerpoint for the workshop, going over it with my actor/choreographer friend Dave, reading lines of my book, and getting everything ready to be able to leave at 4:15 am – I got into the car and… the battery was dead. So… after wracking my tired brain for ten minutes and trying everything I could think of (turn the key on and off, open the hood and shut the hood, try turning the lights on again and again and again) I gave up and went back upstairs to tell my wife I would have to take the other car. Of course that meant, 1) I woke up the dogs (Spike and Gracie) and 2) I woke up my wife (I didn’t know where the other car was parked and this is Queens so it could be anywhere so… I had to wake her up) – neither of which were happy. Okay the dogs were happy because they thought they were going out but that’s another story.
Fifteen minutes later and I was off to the Verrazano Bridge and Staten Island where Dave was now checking his watch and waiting for me. Behind me were an unhappy, awake wife and two smiling dogs.
We spent an hour on the Jersey Turnpike heading south and west.
We made it to the MAGPI studio, after breakfast at COSI (not bad – didn’t know they had breakfast) by 9am, as required, to check in and go over the distance learning machinery. Michael Knight, the technician arrived and showed us around, then set us up. It was a small TV studio with four cameras and two big plasma screens on the wall that we could see the remote sites on. The cover of my book which I’d embedded on four slides, had disappeared. They needed the originals to show up. I didn’t understand what happened to the images but they were gone. Michael found the pics on my website and after twenty minutes of transfer attempts and switching laptops, and statements like, “you used a mac didn’t you?” and “Sometimes this happens,” he made the presentation whole. with fifteen minutes to spare we were ready to go.
Three schools checked in from Ohio, all high school English classes. One large picture and two small pictures appeared of the classes on the plasma screen. A picture of me and Dave appeared on the other screen. My Powerpoint appeared behind us and our picture got smaller. I taught a writing workshop on “How to Write Action Scenes,” presumably because Open Wounds has a lot of action scenes in it and I therefore had some expertise in this area. Dave (a real actor as opposed to me who is an amateur) was terrific as all the characters, especially Lefty (my crippled, English, WWI vet) and I played Cid and narrated. Dave’s a good director so he dragged some semblance of character and pace out of me while providing four different voices for the various other characters. We demonstrated some physicalization of fencing moves – ie: here’s how I worked out the fight we just read before I wrote it. The kids did a writing exercise and one student from each school read their piece out loud. They asked questions like, “Why do you like to write fight scenes? How do you write realistic dialog?” and “Why do you write?” Sixty minutes came and went.
What I learned about distance learning systems:
- It’s very hard to call on kids when they raise their hands. “The boy in the black shirt (they’re all wearing black shirts) in the top screen (they don’t know which screen they’re on), yes that one over there (I point ridiculously at one screen or the other). I finally figured out to say things like, “The boy next to the teacher wearing a yellow shirt (so glad the teachers were wearing something other than black).” What I’ll need to do next time (will there be a next time?) is write down which school is in which frame and call out the school and a description of location (boy in the middle at Ohio High). It will be better than my automatic response of pointing which, of course they could not figure out at all because of the perspective they had of me … well… pointing.
- Michael Knight, the technician, used to be a stage, sound, lighting, expert on the road for all kinds of entertainers and bands and easily gets points for telling the best stories about the stars he’s worked with. He’s tops in Dave and my book.
- I’ve got a shiny forehead. Yes, I do.
- Powerpoint is good and always helps. It creates structure for any presentation and is a nice counterpoint to my shiny forehead.
- There’s no instant feedback on jokes because of the distance and lack of mikes being on at each site. They are all mute and have to un-mute to speak. So it was like talking to a silent audience – always a tough performance and difficult to get a read on how you’re doing.
ReachOutReads
Tomorrow night at 8pm EST, 5pm PST I’ll be Skyping an hour-long show for ReachOut.com. ReachOut website is run by the Inspire USA Foundation, a California-based not for profit whose mission is to help millions of young people live happier lives. Their site is filled with facts about typical teen problems ranging from anxiety and depression to family problems and suicide, real stories about young people who have had these problems, an active blog, a list of ways and sites for get help from, and the ReachOutReads program which hooks up authors with young people to answer questions about their work and lives. If computers were around in Cid Wymann’s (protagonist from Open Wounds) times he would have benefitted from a website like this. Perhaps he wouldn’t have been as lonely.
I’m really happy to have the chance to be a part of the hour-long program tomorrow night. Author, Bethany Hegedus, also editor from Hunger Mountain (an online magazine I’m writing an essay on the creative writing process for the coming issue in May – more on that to come) will be moderating. I’ll be set up in front of my computer, camera aimed at my mug, headset on, and family banished to their rooms (it’s around my son’s bedtime anyway so fair play to him – he’ll be reading) including the two dogs.
I wonder what listeners will ask? It’s strange because my book isn’t out yet and although Bethany has read my book, the young people will not have. I’ll have to go over my pitch synopsis. And remind myself why I started this whole crazy journey 33 years ago by putting pen to paper – yes it was in a time before computers were used by all. There’s something just… right about that.



