Saturday, March 23, 2013

2013 AWP Conference, Boston

So many amazing things to do and see at the conference this year. Admittedly, I haven't been to one of these in a few years, so I was totally blown away. This thing is HUGE! There were something over 12,000 people there, three floors of books, so many panels it was hard to choose sometimes. It wasn't like this in the past. We had a few headliners and everyone flocked to see them. This year there were so many brilliant writers, I was a little star-struck.
Three floors of books just like this room.

I loved this conference, and, too, I love Boston. When I found out the AWP was in Boston, I knew I'd be going. I figured that it would be the last time on the East Coast for a couple of years, so I should go. Having gone, I'm actually considering going next year to Seattle. I met some people I want to stay in touch with. I feel a little invigorated with my writing projects.

Being around so many writers is surreal. People on the plane were going to AWP. Everyone in the van that picked me up from the airport was AWP. Everyone I met, bumped into, passed by in the hallway--writers.

For me, here is the best and worst of the conference.

The best:
No one called it a "con." As big and overwhelming as this sometimes feels, it's still not a con.

I saw Jeannette Winterson, and she was amazing. She has so much energy, I can't picture her sitting still to write. On stage though, she was brilliant. I saw Derrick Walcott, Rosanna Warren, Tim Seibles, Rita Dove, David Ferry, and Olga Broumas. I had dinner with my Uncle Michael, himself a playwright.

I shook hands with Seamus Heaney. Whoa!

I watched Sharon Olds read "Ode to the Clitoris."

And it snowed in Boston. At 3 in the morning, I saw a bunny jumping through piles of snow somewhere in Cambridge.


The worst:
I thought I'd see people. I mean, I thought I'd run into them. I knew they were coming, and I should have seen them. Next time, I'll know to make plans to meet for lunch or dinner or whatevs. There's just way too many people to think you'll casually see them.

I saw Scott Cairns, tried to catch up to him, and then he disappeared into the crowds. I had a moment where I was standing in the middle of a thousand people, and I didn't know if I should turn into the books, go up the escalators, what. He was my thesis advisor, and I haven't seen him in years. I would have liked to say hello.

I didn't get to see Augusten Burroughs or Cheryl Strayed. I didn't get to see Janet Sylvester, but I met someone who showed me where to find her online. I met a stranger who knew her!

She's not a stranger anymore. Debra Monroe knew both Janet and Scott, and we talked all the way to the airport. We're in touch on facebook. I've bought her book. I missed Millicent Accardi, Pinsky, DeLillo, Jorie Graham. And more. So the worst thing is that it's kind of impossible to see and do everything you want to.

I'm already looking forward to Seattle 2014. I'll have to catch up there ~

Thursday, January 31, 2013

How I Read Nonfiction

Fiction, actually
I read fiction at night, non-fiction in the morning. Fiction to relax, to gel. Non-fiction is mostly for jazzing up the brain, waking up to a day. If I read non-fiction at night, I get more awake, not less. So I save the fiction for night-time reading.

Also, it helps to have children and a job so that you are forced to wake up so early that it's still dark outside. And know that if you don't write and read then, you might not get to it. For me, it's akin to not having a cup of coffee. If I don't do this, then I am off my game.

I love being up this early and doing this work. I am not a morning person. I would sleep until noon if I could. I don't watch TV. I just don't have time. Whatever I am going to watch will be on Netflix on the weekends, or on a DVD. I go to the movies. But I don't sit on a couch with the TV on at night. I don't have "shows." I am spared endless moronic adverts.

But what I do do is phone stuff. Yes, I check FB, Twitter, The Atlantic, Huff Post, emails. I try not to do this too much before I start to write.

Checking my electronic stuff is a huge time-waster, and I'm getting up early to save time. I wanted to add that so I don't sound all mightier-than-thou by not watching TV. I do stuff. I keep hearing that a bunch of great TV is out now. Cool. I'll watch it when it gets to Netflix.

So I write first, and then I hate to just stop being in this moment. So, I usually grab something non-fiction from the piles I keep next to the bed. I like having a bunch of different choices. You wouldn't want to only have one TV channel, right?

Here are a few of the books:

The Journey from the Center to the Page: Yoga Philosophies and Practices as Muse for Authentic Writing by Jeff Davis

Finding Water: The Art of Perserverance by Julia Cameron

The Mindbody Prescription: Healing the Body, Healing the Pain by John E. Sarno

The Best American Essays, 2012 by Robert Atwan

The Conde Nast Traveler Book of Unforgettable Journeys: Great Writers on Great Places

There are more. I'm just realizing that I don't remember them all specifically by title. There is a book of travel essays. There is a book on how the Outer Banks was populated. There are a few magazines. It's just like writing - a paragraph or a few pages at a time, you get stuff going.

It's dark outside. I make a cup of tea. The day is not yet crayzee.

Monday, January 28, 2013

A Word about the Blog and 2012

So it turns out that 2012 was a blogless year. As far as I'm concerned, 2012 can suck it. I had other concerns, and they pressed harder. So let's start fresh. I'm on to 2013. I'll commit to doing 1 thing a month (more if I'm feeling frisy!).