I sat for an interview with the Author’s Learning Center, and they have posted the segments online on their website. Today’s segment, the second of three, concerns how to incorporate real-life people and events into your fiction.
I sat for an interview with the Author’s Learning Center, and they have posted the segments online on their website. Today’s segment, the second of three, concerns how to incorporate real-life people and events into your fiction.
Your Scribbler was pleased to sit for an interview with the Author Learning Center, which has posted a portion of the interview on the homepage of their website. You can view Pros and Cons of Working with a Small Independent Publisher here.
Over the next two days, I’ll post two other short portions of the interview: Darlyn Finch Kuhn on How Personal Experiences Influenced Her Book, Sewing Holes, and How Supporting Other Writers Can Benefit an Author.
Your Scribbler is tickled to host Jacksonville poet Lynn Skapyak Harlin at the Southeast Sister Cities Reading Tour at 7 p.m. on April 7th at Bab’s Lab, 603 King Street, Jacksonville, FL 32204.
Poet, writer and editor, Lynn Skapyak Harlin led the Shantyboat Writers Workshop on her boat until Hurricane Irma destroyed it. She continues holding workshops at her home. She has coached and edited many local writers’ and poets’ manuscripts over the past 20 years. For four years, with Carolee Bertisch and Sharon Scholl, she led a poetry workshop at the Florida Heritage Book Festival. She has supported local poetry venues since the 1960s. Her first published poem “War Waste” appeared in Time magazine, in 1970. Her poems appeared in Women’s Voices, State Street Review, Arbus, Section Eight Magazine, Florida Speaks, The Gate, Aquarian, AC PAPA (Ancient City Poets, Authors, Photographers and Authors), deadpaper. org and ashandbones.com. Her books, “Real Women Drive Trucks” and “Press One for More Options” were published in 1997
The Southeast Sister Cities Reading Tour concept is simple. Our writers read in your town. Then your writers read in our town.
A group of Jacksonville authors visited St. Petersburg for the first event. In turn, a group of St. Pete authors will read in Jacksonville on April 7th. Everybody wins!
Visiting writers from St. Pete include: Tiffany Razzano, Cole Bellamy, Gloria Munoz, Wayne Lemmons, and Cathy Salustri. PLUS, hear Jacksonville poet Lynn Skapyak Harlin.
You won’t want to miss it!
Free and open to the public.
This event is co-presented by Wordier Than Thou and Scribbles, with thanks to Bab’s Lab. It is part of Public Art Week 2018 – Building a Better Community.
Public Art Week (PAW) is an annual, week-long initiative that celebrates Jacksonville’s public art and highlights the benefits that are created when investments are made in art that is accessible by all. It is led by the Cultural Council of Greater Jacksonville to encourage residents and visitors to explore and engage with works of art that comprise Jacksonville’s rapidly developing artistic and creative landscape. In addition to advancing the community’s awareness of and engagement with the City of Jacksonville’s official public art collection, PAW also showcases public art initiatives led by private entities and individuals.
PAW supports the Cultural Council’s role of ensuring broad accessibility and public engagement with the arts culturally, socially, educationally, and economically. It also supports the Cultural Council’s role of advocating for public and private financial support for Jacksonville’s arts and cultural sector.
Residents and visitors of Jacksonville are encouraged to explore their artistic side during Public Art Week by capturing images of their favorite murals, sculptures, mosaics, or memorials and then share them through social media. Remember to use #JAXPAW2018 when sharing your photos and tag the Cultural Council (@moreartculture).
We are beyond delighted to host Tiffany Razzano when she reads on Saturday, April 7th at 7 p.m. at Bab’s Lab as part of the Southeast Sister Cities Reading Tour.
Tiffany Razzano is a journalist living in Pinellas Park, Florida, where she lives in a bookstore and runs the literary arts organization Wordier Than Thou. She’s an editor with Tampa Bay Newspapers, and also writes regularly for La Gaceta and 83 Degrees. Her work has also appeared in Publishers Weekly, where she was the Southern correspondent, as well as The Guardian, Creative Loafing – Tampa Bay (where she was the LGBT editor for a number of years) and Ducts. She founded Wordier Than Thou in 2012, and hosts numerous literary events each month.
|
|
BABS’ LAB, CoRK Arts District North
603 King St, Jacksonville, Florida 32204
|
Visiting writers from St. Pete include: Tiffany Razzano, Cole Bellamy, Gloria Munoz, Wayne Lemmons, and Cathy Salustri. PLUS, hear Jacksonville poet Lynn Skapyak Harlin.
You won’t want to miss it!
Free and open to the public.
This event is co-presented by Wordier Than Thou and Scribbles, with thanks to Bab’s Lab. It is part of Public Art Week 2018 – Building a Better Community.
Public Art Week (PAW) is an annual, week-long initiative that celebrates Jacksonville’s public art and highlights the benefits that are created when investments are made in art that is accessible by all. It is led by the Cultural Council of Greater Jacksonville to encourage residents and visitors to explore and engage with works of art that comprise Jacksonville’s rapidly developing artistic and creative landscape. In addition to advancing the community’s awareness of and engagement with the City of Jacksonville’s official public art collection, PAW also showcases public art initiatives led by private entities and individuals.
PAW supports the Cultural Council’s role of ensuring broad accessibility and public engagement with the arts culturally, socially, educationally, and economically. It also supports the Cultural Council’s role of advocating for public and private financial support for Jacksonville’s arts and cultural sector.
Residents and visitors of Jacksonville are encouraged to explore their artistic side during Public Art Week by capturing images of their favorite murals, sculptures, mosaics, or memorials and then share them through social media. Remember to use #JAXPAW2018 when sharing your photos and tag the Cultural Council (@moreartculture).