Showing posts with label Cathy Pickens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cathy Pickens. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 21, 2017

Serendipity, Sisters in Crime, and Robert Dugoni, Oh My!



by Paula Gail Benson

Serendipity has been defined as a happy accident, a course of action that leads to unexpected benefits. According to Wikipedia, the word serendipity was initially used by author Horace Walpole, who, in a 1754 letter written to a friend, described a Persian fairy tale called “The Three Princes of Serendip” where the characters were always encountering things they were not seeking.

Generally, as mystery writers, we’re cautioned about not giving characters their answers too easily and making them face conflict or adversity before reaching resolutions. However, most of us remember in the course of our individual writer’s journey being the beneficiary of good fortune through serendipity.

Two instances where I’ve experienced an unexpected writing benefit were in becoming a member of Sisters in Crime (SinC) and meeting New York Times bestselling and Edgar nominated author Robert Dugoni. How those two separate fortunate incidents came together is the story of this message.    

In my post yesterday on The Stiletto Gang, I described how current national Sisters in Crime President Diane Vallere’s association with Sisters in Crime had influenced and advanced her writing career. Similarly, I credit joining that organization with giving me the information and boost I needed to start submitting my short stories to publishers and to become involved in the mystery blogging community.

Cathy Pickens, author of the Avery Andrews mysteries and former President of Sisters in Crime (thus properly recognized as “Goddess”), encouraged me to become a member. Due to her influence, I joined not only Sisters in Crime, but several of its chapters, including the Guppy Chapter, where I now serve on the Steering Committee and one of my stories appeared in the third Guppy anthology, Fish or Cut Bait.

Meanwhile, after we met at the South Carolina Book Festival, Robert Dugoni invited me to collaborate with him on a short story that was published in Killer Nashville Noir: Cold Blooded.

So, when I learned that Robert was headed to Beaufort, S.C., as part of a book tour, and that his trip coincided with the Palmetto Chapter of Sisters in Crime’s celebration of SinC’s 30th anniversary, I asked if he could make a stop in Columbia. As serendipity would have it, Robert was able to attend the Palmetto Chapter meeting, where he was made an honorary member. In addition, he was interviewed by his good friend Cathy Pickens and told the group how it felt to receive the Edgar nomination for his novel The Seventh Canon.

Of course, there was cake and Cathy Pickens had the honor of making the first “stab” into it, as is benefiting a celebration of mystery authors.

The serendipity continued the following day when Robert accompanied me to a church service and met a fan of his Tracy Crosswhite series. She was thrilled to receive an autographed copy of the latest novel, The Trapped Girl.

So, while I’ll be careful of allowing my characters to experience too much serendipity, I’ll keep enjoying all that I encounter in life.

Has serendipity ever taken you down a happy pathway?    

Tuesday, February 16, 2016

Deckle Edge, a New Literary Festival by Paula Gail Benson

Several times in WWK, I’ve written with enthusiasm about the South Carolina Book Festival, which originally was held in February and later moved to May. Organized by the Humanities Council of South Carolina, the Book Festival was a highly anticipated event for folks who loved reading and writing. A WWK blogging partner, James M. Jackson was a panelist one year. In the past, the Book Festival has featured Jeffrey Deaver, Harlen Coben, Scott Turow, Robert Dugoni, C.J. Box, Hallie Ephron, and Pat Conroy. So, when it was announced last year that the Book Festival would be no more, the news was met with despair.

Fortunately, a group of reading enthusiasts took up the mantle and organized a new festival that will take place this coming weekend. Called Deckle Edge, after the deckle frame used in manual paper making that leaves a ragged or feathered edge as the paper comes through the machine, it promises a terrific three-day celebration of all things literary.

Hank Phillippi Ryan
The local organizers welcomed our Palmetto Chapter of Sisters in Crime’ request to be involved and our chapter was delighted when Sisters in Crime National gave us a grant to bring Hank Phillippi Ryan to participate. Not only will we be celebrating Hank’s latest Agatha nominated What You See, but also the reissuance of her first Charlotte McNally book, Prime Time, which won the Agatha for best first novel. Hank will be involved in two events on Saturday, February 20, the first at 9:30 AM moderating a panel of mystery authors that will include Palmetto Chapter members C. Hope Clark and Sasscer Hill and the second at 12:30 PM being interviewed by former Sisters in Crime National President Cathy Pickens. Since Hank also is a former SinC National President, it will be wonderful to have two “goddesses” from National’s pantheon to enthrall us with tales about their work and experiences in publishing.

Cathy Pickens
On Friday, February 19, I’m excited to be teaching a workshop called “Plotting Strategies for Short Stories, Novels, and Plays.” Another member of the Palmetto Chapter, J.E. Thompson, will have a segment about children’s mysteries on Saturday. On Sunday, the Richland County Library is hosting a local author showcase featuring some of our chapter’s members.

C. Hope Clark
The Palmetto Chapter is especially delighted that our member Carla Damron, a WWK contributor, is being honored for her new book The Stone Necklace. As Carla has mentioned in her WWK posts, her novel is being published by the University of South Carolina Press’ Story River Books, Pat Conroy’s imprint. It has been selected for the “One Book, One Community” program (where the folks in Columbia are urged to read and discuss The Stone Necklace), so Carla has been making lots of personal appearances and many folks have been reading the beautiful work where she has carefully crafted four intertwining, compelling stories. Carla’s panel will close out the Deckle Edge Book Festival on Sunday.

Sasscer Hill
If you can attend the festival this coming weekend in Columbia, SC, you’ll hear great authors and have the opportunity to view a number of historic venues. My workshop will take place in the Woodrow Wilson Family Home, where the future president spent his boyhood years. Hank’s events will be in the Columbia Museum of Art.

So wish us well as we embark upon this new endeavor. Do you have a book festival in your community? Have you thought about initiating one?

Carla Damron

Saturday, May 24, 2014

A Report from the South Carolina Book Festival



Convention Center
The 18th annual South Carolina Book Festival took place last weekend, Friday, May 16 through Sunday, May 18, at the Columbia Metropolitan Convention Center. Each year, I think the Festival improves, and this year is no exception.

On Friday, three writing workshops offered information about: (1) writing and submitting short stories; (2) publishing in the children’s fiction market; and (3) the art of making comics. I truly enjoyed teaching my thirty students in the short story workshop and passed along much of the advice you gave me in your comments to my previous blog. In the workshop, my students had the opportunity to write two short stories, one using just six words (like Hemingway’s “For Sale: Baby Shoes, Never Worn”) and one with six sentences (a technique recommended by Art Taylor, where each sentence describes: (1) character, (2) desire, (3) action, (4) conflict, (5) climax, and (6) resolution). I attended the children’s fiction workshop. Instructor Kami Kinard, who writes humorous novels for tweens and teens, provided excellent practical advice for writers interested in that market.

Christopher Buckley
Christopher Buckley, novelist, political satirist, speech-writer for President George H. W. Bush, editor of Esquire, and son of William F. Buckley, presented the keynote address on Friday night in the USC Law School Auditorium. He spoke about authors’ trials in selecting book titles, mentioning that editor Maxwell Perkins convinced F. Scott Fitzgerald to change Trimalchio in East Egg to The Great Gatsby, and that Joseph Heller planned to call his novel Catch-18 until he learned Leon Uris’s Mila 18 was due for release at the same time. In addition, Buckley noted that title translations have been hazardous. For example, The Grapes of Wrath in Japanese became The Angry Raisins.

On Saturday, I moderated the “Sassy Southern Suspense” panel featuring Susan M. Boyer (Agatha award winner for Best First Novel), Kendel Lynn (Agatha award nominee for Best First Novel and Managing Editor of Henery Press), and Cathy Pickens (St. Martin’s Malice Domestic award winner), three of the funniest and most delightful mystery writers you would ever want to meet.
Susan M. Boyer, Kendel Lynn, Cathy Pickens

Susan’s Liz Talbot and Kendel’s Elliott Lisbon series are set in the lowcountry, on islands off the coast, while Cathy’s Avery Andrews operates mostly in the upstate. The discussion became quite spirited when I asked which part of South Carolina was more humorous, and Cathy mentioned a certain contentious rivalry between USC and Clemson. We got a little more audience participation than anticipated! We also received some lovely compliments from folks who attended.
Conroy Siblings

Pat Conroy took the stage with three brothers and a sister to discuss their family life, which has been explored in Pat’s books. They said they had MLD contests to determine who acted “Most Like Dad” (known to readers as The Great Santini). They also spoke of a very poignant time at the funeral of their brother Tom, who committed suicide. At the funeral mass, the priest kept referring to the deceased as  “Tim” instead of “Tom.” Pat turned to his youngest brother Tim, who was sitting behind him at the service, and said he was so sorry to learn of his demise. Later, they discovered that the name had been misprinted in the program.
Friends and readers, Lynn Pixley and Anne Woodman, with Cathy Pickens

Sunday, I attended two terrific panels Cathy Pickens moderated. The first featured authors whose works included a paranormal element: Sonja Condit (her debut novel Starter House has a young couple expecting a baby moving into a home with a disruptive ghostly child), Nina de Gramont (who writes young adult novels with gothic elements), and Jason Mott (whose first novel The Returned is the inspiration for the TV series Resurrection).

Amy Carol Reeves, Cathy Pickens, Megan Shepherd, Bruce Holsinger

In the second, three historical novelists, Bruce Holsinger (a professor of English and Medieval Studies at the University of Virginia has written A Burnable Book about the relationship between Chaucer and John Gower), Amy Carol Reeves (a professor of nineteenth-century British literature pens a series of young adult novels based on Jack the Ripper), and Megan Shepherd (the daughter of independent bookstore owners crafts gothic young adult novels that stem from The Island of Doctor Moreau and The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde), spoke about the inspiration for their books and how they strived to be historically accurate while providing entertaining stories.

Dorothy McFalls, Nina Bruhns

A wonderful aspect of the Book Festival is that it gives you a chance to reunite with friends and fellow authors and book enthusiasts. This year, I spent time in the exhibit hall with two groups of authors, the Lowcountry Romance Writers and the Palmetto Christian Writers Network.

Also, I had the chance to reconnect with fabulous independent bookstore owners from Windsor (near Aiken), SC, Fran and Don Bush.
Deena Bouknight, Sharon Leaf, Fran Bush, Susan Craft, Don Bush, PGB, Buffy MacDonald Crabtree, Linnette Mullin
One special moment occurred that I’ll long remember. As I was entering the room to moderate my panel, a student from my workshop gave me what looked like a large card to thank me for the class. I didn’t have the opportunity to open it until later. Inside, I found that she had bound and illustrated her six sentence story into a small book. It is a keepsake from the Festival that I will always treasure.

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

C.R.E.A.T.E. with Cathy Pickens



This past Saturday, a friend and I drove to Charleston, S.C., to hear Cathy Pickens speak about C.R.E.A.T.E. (Capture, Ramble, Engage, Act, Tweak, Expand). She described her research, discoveries, and methodology about how creativity can he harnessed, developed, and nurtured.

Known in the mystery writing community as a past President of Sisters in Crime and current Secretary of the Mystery Writers of America, Cathy writes the award-winning Southern Fried series, featuring lawyer Avery Andrews who returns to her small upstate South Carolina town to practice law and ends up solving murders. At Queens College in Charlotte, North Carolina, Cathy is recognized as an award-winning administrator and professor of business law and ethics.

Into this mix of accomplishment, she has brought her own quest to learn how the creative mind operates and as a result has written a nonfiction book, C.R.E.A.T.E....Your Path. Hopefully, it will be published soon, because what Cathy has to say is important, inspiring, and invigorating for both business and fiction writing pursuits.
Cathy begins her presentation by handing participants a page with twelve circles and asks that they draw as many things with circles as possible as quickly as they can. When she calls time, she has the class compare results. Some draw within each circle, others draw around each circle, and still others combine several circles to create a picture. No answer is wrong. Seeing the variety opens minds to new approaches.

Even though she believes persistence trumps talent, Cathy has discovered that every creative venture is developed in stages. By using the acronym C.R.E.A.T.E., she demonstrates the progression of the creative process. The first stage is to "capture," or observe or recognize the potential of ideas. Cathy recommends using your filing system of preference. She keeps a hand-written notebook handy to record observations, leaving space to categorize entries and provide a rough index when the notebook is full.

The second is to "ramble." At this point, the creator has to venture out of his comfort zone, read and study what he wants to do, test his limits, and confront his fears. Cathy speaks about a childhood experience of telling her grandfather, a man adept at dealing with children, that she was afraid. He gave her comfort by responding, "What's the worst thing that can happen? They may kill you, but they can't eat you." (I think it prophetic that a future mystery author would find that phrase reassuring. After all, isn't it part of the hero's journey to encounter a symbolic death in order to revive and reestablish himself?)

Stage three is to "engage," or encounter "the voice of doom" yet continue on with the task. The fourth stage is to settle down to work, to "act." Stage five is to "tweak," to edit or revise. Cathy cautions to make this fifth stage an internal process at first, then solicit feedback gradually so the creator maintains control in developing the result. Finally, the sixth stage is to "expand," or when you reach the end of one project, be ready to proceed to the next.

Anyone who has heard Cathy speak knows that she brings life experiences and humor to her presentations and that she can distill a concept as well as provide excellent additional resources for participants who wish to delve further into a topic. If you have the opportunity to attend her C.R.E.A.T.E. workshop, I strongly encourage you to go. What you learn will help you approach any task with new eyes and enhanced vision.

What have you done lately to spur your creative juices?