Calling all sleuths! Join me May 11-15 @ClueTFF for the 2015 #TwitterFiction Festival!

Honors, News

When a college reunion ends in murder, everybody is a suspect. Who did it? Where? With what weapon?

It’s a modern-day twist on the classic Parker Brothers board game “Clue,” where the usual suspects are glued to their smartphones and social media accounts during a tense dinner party in Presidio Heights. What are they all hiding? What are they oversharing? Before the night’s end, old secrets will be revealed and new secrets will be formed.

If you have a Twitter account, feel free to interact with these colorful characters as the homicide and subsequent investigation unfold in real-time. Ask them questions. Try to trip them up. Make them confess. Can you trust what they tell you? If you don’t have a Twitter account, you can still follow along by visiting the @ClueTFF Twitter page during the festival. The whole narrative will also be published on Storify for posterity after the event.

During May 11-15, follow all the major players here:
@MrBoddyTFF
@MissScarlettTFF
@MrsPeacockTFF
@MisterGreenTFF
@ColMustardTFF
@MrsWhiteTFF
@ProfPlumTFF

For the full schedule and a taste of all the festival has to offer, follow @TWfictionfest and @TwitterBooks on Twitter during the week.

 

Full disclosure: I am beyond excited about being a featured writer (contest winner) for this year’s festival. However, I have never written a murder mystery before. I have also never written a multi-character story on Twitter (or any social media) before. I am beginning to think it’s a bit insane to attempt doing both for the first time, at the same time. Nevertheless, this will definitely be an adventure, and we can never have too many of those. So grab your magnifying glasses, your casebooks, and your Sherlockian nicotine patches. I hope you will join me for the ride.

Let’s Talk About Craft

Honors, Musings

Yes, that would be “Craft” with a C, not a K. Kraft Singles are the best though, make no mistake.

I remember writing a craft paper on Christopher Coake’s short story “All Through the House” (one of my all-time faves; it always reminds me of Harold Pinter’s brilliant play “Betrayal” as well) back in 2007 for a Fiction Forms workshop. One of the things I discussed in it is the difference between a movie and a piece of literature and the differences in the construction of each.

My parents are classic film buffs. It’s kind of a non-secret that my sister and I were both named after film stars from that era. I grew up watching movies, and wanting to be in movies, and wanting to direct movies. Eventually I think I realized film wasn’t really the medium for me; I needed something that was a bit more solitary. However, I still love films, often more than books, and I still love to make films in my head. I admire anyone who makes them for real because I think it’s a very difficult task. But what draws me to writing is the challenge. While making a movie, you have so many tools at your disposal: the lighting, the set design, costumes, music, editing, direction, all the nuances of acting. You can literally show and not tell. And people say this about good writing, that it shows, doesn’t tell. But you can’t really show anything it writing, you have to tell. Because all you have are words and blank sheets of paper, and somehow you have to tell. It’s the way you tell that makes the difference. You really have to be able to be manipulate words and sentence structure and be a genuine wordsmith.

I’ve been thinking about this lately because I have actually been writing (hallelujah!) and I’ve been struggling a little with the challenge. I don’t know how other people are, but when I’m writing, I’m reading it out loud, I’m seeing it happen like a movie, acting it out, the whole bit. Finding a way to invoke a certain feeling or emotion in the reader like they would experience if they were watching it unfold on screen is sometimes simple. At other times, it seems almost impossible. But that’s why I keep doing this, year after year, to make it possible for myself. I’ve been writing fiction since I was about 6 years old. Sometimes, I find myself a bit jaded by the whole process. Over the years, I’ve quit writing “forever” more times than I can count. But I’m obviously here to stay.

Before I forget again, because I realize I never posted about this, I want to thank the editors at Rougarou for nominating my story “What Goes Down, Must Come Back Up” for the Pushcart Prize and “Best of the Web” anthology last year! 2010 was definitely a great year for me. I hope to make 2011 even better, and I hope I’ll have some exciting news in the next few months! I keep saying I will blog about my list of favorite novels of all time, but I’m lazy. It’ll happen eventually.