Posts Tagged With: Introductions

Introducing Fiona…

Hello! It’s Fiona Miller-Stevens here and I’m excited to bring you my first post for The Print Posse. Last week the lovely Gabbie Stroud wrote about the lonely sport of writing. You can read her post here.

I doubt that I would be part of the wonderful Print Posse if it were not for select influences throughout my life.

“The most intriguing people you will encounter in this life are the people who had insights about you that you didn’t know about yourself.”  ― Shannon L. Alder

When I was six years old, my family moved interstate mid school term. My new teacher made a comment early on, “You are a good reader, Fiona.” Those six words solidified my future. Someone important – a teacher! – told me that I was good at something. From that moment on, reading and words were something I was good at, and I loved it.

As a teenager I spent too many hours creating magazines for and about my school friends. No photoshop or computers involved, just blank paper, pens, scissors, glue and copies of TV Hits and 16 Magazine. There were breaking headlines such as, ‘Leo D Loves Fiona’. If only that passion was harnessed into my school work.

My father was an avid reader and much of his spare time was spent modelling good reading practice. My mother adored biographies and works of non-fiction. A framed picture of her meeting Germaine Greer hung proudly on the wall. Books and writers were something to be valued. I was raised in a creative household and in my early teens my artist mother presented me with my first writer’s notebook inscribed with, “Write Fiona – Write!”

 InscriptionPic FMS

And I did. The first chapters of many novels, poems, journal entries drenched with woe and heartache. They serve as a good reminder for how all-consuming those teenage years can be.

At university I studied creative writing, literature and history and went on to become a secondary teacher. I dabbled with various forms of writing but it was not until 2013 when I wrote my first complete manuscript.

When I started work on my MS I was too nervous to tell anyone. My husband knew but I lacked the confidence to tell anyone else. Eventually I told three of my senior students who were part of my YA Book Club. Their enthusiasm and excitement for my story inspired me. Those three girls taught me to believe in my story.

When the MS was ready, I asked one of those students (who at this stage had graduated) to be a beta reader. I value her feedback but it was her comment on the final page that gives me light when the writing process becomes too much.

 Inscription2Pic FMS

In 2014 I tentatively stepped onto the path to publication. It is a longer road than I could ever have anticipated but it is one paved with learning experiences and lined with amazing people – members of the writing community.

When writing my first MS I had no contact with other writers. I was not part of any writing groups, associations or even connected through social media. When I finally typed “The End” in December 2013 I joined the Queensland Writers Centre and through there I signed up for an on-line pitching course. Meeting Gabbie, Yanicke and Karen was a new experience – here were writers at all stages of the publication journey who were willing to offer advice, friendship and support.

Mid last year I discovered Twitter (well, technically I’d signed up a few years back to watch Charlie Sheen’s “Winning” feed but never got any further than that). It wasn’t just another social network where people post photos of their dinner (though I’m sure there’s plenty of that), here was a place for readers and writers to connect. I love it because I learn from agents, publishers, writers, authors and even readers. I am amazed at the support within the writing community for one another.

I am the writer I am today because I have been shaped by the influences of others. I may not remember the name of my second grade teacher but I remember her words. For without her positive reinforcement maybe my life would have led in a completely different direction.

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Introducing Gabbie…

Hello Beautiful People – it’s Gabbie here and this is my first blog for The Print Posse.  Special thanks to Yanicke for getting us started.  If you haven’t read her post you should do that now. How gorgeous is that picture of her as a youngster reading with her cat Tobias?

Writing is a lonely sport. You do it all on your own and even when someone does finally read your work, they do that all on their own. It’s not like a huge cheer goes up the minute they read your best sentence. There’s no Mexican Wave after your most well-crafted chapter. And as you write, there’s no commentator describing your progress.

A few pages I scrawled the other night.

{Thank Gawd for that hey? Can you imagine it?}

“She’s writing some dialogue, it’s interesting, it’s witty oh but no, fatigue is setting in – here comes a cliché. Such a shame! Wait, wait… she’s re-reading and yes! She’s hitting delete, that cliché is gone. The scene is saved. So the score at this stage is three thousand words deleted and forty thousand on the page – of which 20% is pretty ordinary.”

I give thanks everyday for the delete key.

I give thanks everyday for the delete key.

And writing is nothing much like other long-term projects either. Consider knitting – even when you’re knitting you can at least hold up your work in progress and people can admire your sixty rows of knit one purl two. They can say encouraging things like that looks cosy and you’re so clever. When a writer is working on their manuscript, people tend to say the most unhelpful things like isn’t that book finished yet? when will it be published? and gosh it’s taking you a long time isn’t it?

Started crocheting this bunny rug when I was four months pregnant with my daughter, Sophie.  She's now four... years.

Started crocheting this bunny rug when I was four months pregnant with my daughter, Sophie. She’s now four… years old.

On the rare occasion that a writer might hold up their work-in-progress and offer it for critique, most people don’t know what to say. It’s just a pile of papers or a few thousand words on a screen. The person being shown the work knows that if they’re going to look at it – I mean really look at it – then they’re going to have to invest some serious time and brain-based energy.

Here's an old manuscript from years ago.  My mentor at the time - author Gary Crew - provided all the scrawls and scribbles.  There's a lot isn't there?

Here’s an old manuscript from years ago. My mentor at the time – author Gary Crew – provided all the scrawls and scribbles. There’s a lot isn’t there?

Writing’s lonely for other reasons too. You have to lock yourself away from your family (or lock your family away– always an option I like to consider).

Sophie (nearly 4 years old)

Sophie (nearly 4 years old)

You have to say “no” to nice things like yoga or coffee with friends. You have to be alone so words can seep into the place where all the other bits of life would normally go.

I was a lonely writer for a long while. I thought it was just the nature of the beast and so I struggled on in solitude wishing I had felt the urge to be a knitter or a footballer or anything that was a bit more social, a bit more “Oh that’s coming along nicely”, more “Yeah – great catch Stroudy!”. But ever since I was a little girl, I knew just knew that I was going to be a writer. I’ve tried my fair share of knitting projects and once I even joined a touch footy team (where I ran up and down the sideline before a helpful onlooker explained I wasn’t even on the field). No – I am a writer. I always have been. Snippets of my earliest writing still litter my childhood home.

My mum's still finding little stories I wrote!  We think I authored this one when I was around two or three.

My mum’s still finding little stories I wrote! We think I authored this one when I was around two or three.

Being stuck in regional NSW only seemed to make it worse. Although Merimbula is a beautiful place, the literary scene isn’t bursting with festivals and book releases and workshops. When you call out for another writer, you tend to hear the echo of your own voice.

This is where I live!  Yep - it's gorgeous.  Just not a lot of support for emerging writers in these parts.

This is where I live! Yep – it’s gorgeous. Just not a lot of support for emerging writers in these parts.

As time passed I let my pages of words fly into the world and my first book was published (Measuring Up). And through this process I discovered other authors and it dawned on me that we can be lonely side-by-side, in unison, together.

That’s what The Print Posse is for me and I hope it will become the same for you. It’s a space where writers can be lonely together and where these four fab ladies can reassure you that you are not alone in the lonely sport of writing. Readers can share in the journey, watching us evolve and hopefully- one day – read our swag of published books whilst saying “I knew those girls when…”

Next week you’ll hear from the delightful Fi Miller-Stevens who I know you are going to love and adore! But while you’re waiting for her post, why not leave The Print Posse a comment? We’d love to have some encouraging words thrown our way. Or if you’re a writer needing some support, just let us know and we will say nice, encouraging things. The comment box is just below.

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Introducing Yanicke…

Well, hello… *waves*

Being the first to post on our new blog is a little daunting… but also exciting 🙂 It means The Print Posse is finally a reality!

I’ve always wanted to be a part of a kick-ass writing team, ever since I discovered The Merry Sisters of Fate back in 2010. If you’re not familiar with them, The Merry Sisters of Fate are a fantastic writing trio comprised of Maggie Stiefvater, Brenna Yovanoff and Tessa Gratton – three of the most awesome YA writers ever (if you haven’t already guessed, I’m a child of the 80s – I apologise in advance for my overuse of adjectives such awesome, cool and bodacious). In May 2008, they started hosting a blog over on Live Journal and every month would each publish one original piece of fiction.

Then last year, I was fortunate enough to meet Gabbie, Fiona and Karen while participating in a pitch-writing workshop hosted by The Australian Writers Marketplace. We kept in touch after the course finished, cheering each other on and giving each other advice, and then one day I thought “Hey, why don’t we start our own writers’ blog?” So I passed the idea by the girls, and one thing led to another and now, BAM, here we are! 😀

But that’s enough said about The Print Posse for now. Today, I’m supposed to be writing about me.

Like pretty much every writer out there, I’ve loved books since forever. As a child I devoured novels and series such as The Earthsea Trilogy by Ursula Le Guin, Nancy Drew by Carolyn Keene, The Haunted Mesa by Louis L’Amour, The Hobbit by Tolkien, The Chronicles of Narnia by Lewis, and anything Isaac Asimov. Oh, and I absolutely adored Choose Your Own Adventures.

As a teen, I gobbled up Point Horrors – you know, those short but exciting (and sometimes so scary I would huddle on my bed under the covers as I read them) books by writers such as Richie Tankersley Cusick, RL Stine, Christopher Pike, LJ Smith and Caroline B Cooney. To this day my most cherished YA trilogy is The Secret Diaries by Janice Harrell.

As an adult I’ve enjoyed Johanna Lindsey and Diana Gabaldon. And, of course, Lori Handeland, Laurell K Hamilton, MaryJanice Davidson, Charlaine Harris and Jennifer Armintrout (Cyrus is one of my all-time favourite vampires) to name a few. And I don’t mind me a little Nicholas Sparks every now and then.

Also through the years, being half Norwegian, I’ve been drawn to folklore and fairy tales of Scandinavia. Oh, and my favourite Norwegian novel, in case you are wondering, is Victoria by Knut Hamsun.

This is me at about 10 years of age reading a book I still use as a resource today - The Dictionary of Superstitions by Caradeau & Donner. Oh, and my cat, Tobias :)

This is me at about 10 years of age reading a book I still use as a resource today – The Dictionary of Superstitions by Caradeau & Donner. Oh, and my cat, Tobias 🙂

Over the years, I’ve tried my hand at writing little bits and pieces here and there. When I was about ten years old and in school, I wrote and illustrated The Bermuda Project, which was a blatant rip off of “inspired” by a computer game I loved even though it drove me mad. When I was 12 and in Norway, I wrote a short story about a deserted town, complete with rolling tumbleweeds and cowboys who drank whisky and rye. Alas, that is about all I can recall of the story now – that, and my family’s ruckus laughter when I read my masterpiece out loud (and, believe me, I hadn’t meant for it to be comedy). In high school, I started writing a story about a bunch of teens driving to a beach house for the weekend where a dead body turned up – no doubt inspired by my obsessive love of Point Horrors. And I’m sure I’ve made countless other attempts at writing, the details of which presently escape my recollection.

It wasn’t until 2009 that I got serious about writing. I had a young son, two bachelor’s degrees and had been practising law all of about five minutes when I thought “Stuff it! I’m going to follow my dreams”. And ever since then I’ve been banging my head against the wall on a daily basis… and loving every minute of it 😀

For me, there is nothing like writing. It has given my life meaning like no other pursuit ever has. It fills my mind with delicious fantasies and makes my blood race through my veins. Being a writer makes even the most hum drum activities, like cleaning house and folding clothes, exciting endeavours – because I’m off somewhere in my mind, plotting and planning about other worlds, people, monsters, mayhem and good old fashioned obsession. And I can’t even listen to a song anymore without imagining how it applies to my characters.

Being a writer means what’s going on in my head is not always about real life anymore, it’s about my characters – where they’ve been and where they’re taking me next.

And now that’s enough about me 😀

Be sure to check back with us next Sunday when the lovely Gabrielle Stroud makes her first appearance.

Thanks for dropping by!

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