Writing My Own Story

I’ve written stories and poems and essays since I first learned to write in first grade. If you’re reading this, I’m guessing you’ve written all your life, too. I wrote throughout elementary school and throughout my teens. I slowed a little but kept writing throughout my twenties. I wrote sporadically in my thirties and early … Read More

Unplugging

I’m considering getting a home telephone installed. A prehistoric landline. Like many people these days, I gave up my landline more than a dozen years ago. I didn’t need it. Heck, my cell phone has so many bells and whistles, I could give up my television, my CD player, my camera, my calendar, my calculator, … Read More

A Writer and Her Coffee

I think I was born to be a writer. I love coffee. I love the aroma. I love the flavor. I love to hold my coffee mug up close to my face with both hands and feel its warmth. From what I see on social media, writers love coffee. Maybe it’s because it’s so evocative, … Read More

Writing My Life Away

I used to complain a great deal about how little time I had to write. Okay. I still complain about it. But I complain about it a lot less than I used to. Because years ago I had an epiphany, and I no longer act like my words are something I can’t control. Here’s something … Read More

A Handful of Writers & Their Pastimes

Feature art and image courtesy of Christopher Wiley. Leo Tolstoy played chess. Madeleine L’Engle played the piano. Jane Austen played cards. Mark Twain was into scrapbooking and inventing–he combined these two hobbies to invent the scrapbook with adhesive pages. This week, I want to encourage you to get away from your desk and out of … Read More

Writing and Writing on Running

Please enjoy this guest post by writer and runner Collin Mitchell. Much has been written about the relationship between running and the successful writing life: there are the obvious comparisons between the slog of marathon training and producing a novel, the way fresh air and exertion clears fog from the brain, and the age-old idea … Read More

More Writers & Their Pastimes

Feature image courtesy of Mackenzie Kram. Sylvia Plath kept bees. Madeleine L’Engle played the piano. Flannery O’Connor raised peacocks. Emily Dickinson was an award-winning baker. Franz Kafka collected porn. I can’t remember what triggered it. I think it may have been a book I was reading, The Creative Habit by Twyla Tharp. Whatever it was, … Read More

6 More Writers & Their Pastimes

Feature image of writer & aerialist Chih Wang courtesy of Brandi Cooper. I got such a great response to my request for the ways my writer friends’ pastimes inform their writing that I thought I’d share a half dozen more this week … and a half dozen more next week! Here’s part two of writers … Read More

6 Writers & Their Pastimes

Feature image “Morning Star” courtesy of Trey Burnette. I’ve been fascinated lately with the way our creative interests and hobbies play into or support our writing. Nearly all of my writer friends have other interests. Some are creative, some are just for fun, some are more grounding. I asked a half dozen writers to tell … Read More