Showing posts with label Mormon Lit Blitz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mormon Lit Blitz. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 29, 2017

In Which I Have a Birthday and Review the Year


via GIPHY

- a post by Jeanna Mason Stay

Next week is my birthday. I’ll be 37, which is exciting if you like prime numbers but less fun if you prefer to have lots of factors in your age (like 36, which is fantastic—1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 9, 12, 18, 36!). If you multiple 37 by 3, however, you do get a cool number (111), so it’s not all bad. Plus, it gives you the opportunity to be geeky about numbers, which is always a bonus.

Anyway, I think it’s about time for an early midlife crisis, but I just don’t know what direction to take that (except, of course, rearranging all the furniture in my house and trying to toss half of my belongings, but since that happens regularly, it doesn’t really count).

When I think about my age and writing, though, I can’t help but think of many/most of my favorite authors. Shannon Hale and Brandon Sanderson are both only a few years older than me. They’ve been publishing waaaaaay longer than I have (since, technically, I still haven’t!). Kate DiCamillo published Because of Winn Dixie when she was 36ish. We won’t go on and on, because that would be depressing. I guess the point is that it sure doesn’t feel like I’m doing much with my writing career.

At the same time, I’m quite aware that their career paths are just not for me. But then I think, “Maybe it’s because I’m just not a hard enough worker” (totally true), “Maybe I’m not talented” (hopefully not true), blah blah blah. I dither a lot. In the end, pretty much the only reasonable conclusion on this topic is Comparison = Bad.

So instead of comparisons, it seems like a good idea to think about the things I have done this year with writing.

I’ve written a bunch of short stories and flash fiction, two of which are going into anthologies relatively soon. I’ve participated in a flash fiction competition, which has been delightfully fun so far. I won the Mormon Lit Blitz this year. (Yay!) I won a Beginning of Book contest. I was given a great opportunity that is still terrifying the pants off me (and I am therefore stalling!)

I tried writing several stories that I wasn’t good enough to write yet. One of them turned out well. Some turned out okay anyway, though not amazing. One of them crashed and is still burning. I’m planning on pulling out the fire extinguisher and trying again. In trying things I wasn’t ready for, I got (hopefully) just a teensy bit better.

I started out the year with a goal of writing every single day. That goal also crashed and burned around August, but that was still pretty good for me. I went farther on that than I had previously, and I still write many days, though not even close to all.

I taught a writing class to a group of awesome teens, and as part of that, I put together an anthology of their awesome writing. It was an insane amount of work, but it turned out so fun, and I’m so glad I did it. I learned a lot about how anthologies work, how hard it is to put things in an order that makes sense and flows, and a lot of mishmash of stuff that I may never need to know again.

I discovered how much I love short fiction. I’m learning how it gives me most of the joy of writing, which is a big part of why I write in the first place. But it comes with far fewer of the bouts of angst, suffering, agony, and self-doubt that novel-writing has done in the past. So I’ve not given up on novels, but I am definitely loving the change of pace.

And none of this even touches on the sheer awesomeness that is each of my kids, which is a whole different topic.


Looking back, I’m really happy about writing this year, even though it still isn’t what I had planned on. I won some, lost some, grew and changed a lot. Another time I’ll start thinking about goals for the coming year, but for now, I think I’ll just relish where I’ve been. I’ll never catch up to my author crushes, but I think maybe I’ll find a place where I’m happy being me.

Thursday, June 15, 2017

Shameless Self-Promotion!: Mormon Lit Blitz edition

Have you heard of the Mormon Lit Blitz? It's a flash fiction contest that's been going on around this time every year for the past five or six years. Flash fiction, if you don't know, is generally considered to be fiction under 1000 words (although it doesn't include children's picture and board books, which are usually in that range too). It's fun to write--though it can be surprisingly difficult--and quick to read. Hence the "flash" part.

This year, my entry was a finalist, and this week is the voting. So I'm taking a moment to shamelessly promote my story and hope that you will go read it and the other stories then vote.

It's titled "Forty Years," and it's the story of a woman and her relationship with her mother and with motherhood.

The voting ends on Friday, so if you're inclined to vote, go do it! Here's the link to voting instructions. Also, there's a small discussion of each individual piece going on here (and of course you can page to the other stories' discussions too), so if you have a desire to share your thoughts on any of the stories, I encourage you to do so. Being writers, you know how awesome it feels to have people respond positively or thoughtfully to your work, so go share that feeling with someone else!

And if you're on Facebook, go like the Mormon Lit Blitz so that you can hear about and enter the contest next year!

Thanks,
Jeanna

Wednesday, June 3, 2015

Come on, Let’s Blitz Again

- a post by Jeanna Mason Stay


It’s that time again! Time to spend a few minutes reading some fun, interesting, thought-provoking, and beautiful short Mormon fiction and then vote on which you liked best. Yup, it’s Mormon Lit Blitz time.

For the past several years, the Mormon Lit Blitz has presented an array of short fiction (less than 1000 words) on a wide variety of Mormon topics. With the exception of the first year (in which I competed, so I’m not exactly unbiased), this year has been my favorite. There are some really wonderful pieces in this year’s competition.

Lacey talked last week about condensing your writing (even if you don’t write picture books). If you want to see this in action, the Blitz is a great place to witness how much meaning and power you can pack into a very few words.

For me, Adams’ “Faded Garden” was the most powerful for imagery and sheer visceral-ness (can we pretend that’s a word?). Plus, I think it perfectly captures an idea that is hard to put into words—and I have a soft spot for anything about Eve. Young’s “Best Wedding Advice Ever” was hilarious. And also, the best wedding advice ever. Jepson’s “Angry Sunbeam,” Cowley’s “Five Year Journal,” Young’s “Echo of Boy”—all of these captured moments and events that were both moving and very, very real.

In fact, I think perhaps that is what made this year so good, in my opinion. Just about every piece touched on a universal experience or feeling in a way that made it very real and very close. No, I’ve never hurt anyone as much as the character in Hales’ “Child Star,” and my husband has never turned into a giant rabbit like in Lemmon’s “Disability, Death, or Other Circumstances.” I’ve never made beaded lizards to “decorate someone else’s service” (Parker). But I have certainly made mistakes I regretted, struggled to find the blessings in a terrible situation, felt frustration at not making a difference.

So I encourage you, if you have just a minute or two and want to be touched by a feeling of connection to others, if you want to laugh or smile or just think, give those minutes to this year’s Mormon Lit Blitz. You won’t regret it.

(Also, vote! Voting closes at the end of the week.)

Here’s a handy list of the stories, essays, and poems in this year’s Blitz. You can also find voting instructions here.

Eric Jepson, “Angry Sunbeam
Heather Young, “Best Wedding Advice Ever
Tyler Chadwick, “Three Meditations on Fatherhood
Scott Hales, “Child Star
Emily Harris Adams, “Faded Garden
Katherine Cowley, “The Five Year Journal

Annaliese Lemmon, “Disability, Death, or Other Circumstance
William Morris, “The Joys of Onsite Apartment Building Management
Darlene Young, “Echo of Boy
Lehua Parker, “Decorating Someone Else’s Service
Julia Jeffrey, “Should Have Prayed for a Canoe”
Merrijane Rice, “Mother”

Enjoy!

Thursday, June 26, 2014

The Mormon Lit Blitz--Flash Fiction Fun!

- a post by Jeanna Mason Stay
 
For the past three years, a lovely group of literary folk have been running the Mormon Lit Blitz, a little competition for flash fiction (in this case, pieces that are less than 1000 words). Today marks one of the last days of the competition before voting begins.

The fun thing about flash fiction is that it’s just that—flash, fast, just little snippets that pack punch. Some of the pieces each year have been poetry (which I confess I put in a different category from flash fiction, but some of it was so good I didn’t care), and others have been experimental forms, while most have been just straight-up short fiction.

I hope you will consider reading through the entries for this year’s Lit Blitz and voting when the time comes. You’ll get fun and interesting and thought-provoking works, all in three-minute bursts! If you want to join the discussion on the pieces, here’s where you can do that too (the link is only to the discussion of the first piece, but I have faith in your ability to figure out how to find the rest from there). And maybe next year you can enter and be part of the blitz.



A few past favorites (in no particular order, and surprisingly many relevant to motherhood):*

"Actionable Intelligence" by Jonathon Penny

"Stillborn" by Merrijane Rice

"When I Rise" by Kimberly Hartvigsen


"Birthright" by Emily Harris Adams

"No Substitute for Chocolate" by Jeanna Mason Stay**  ***


* I won’t have added this year’s favorites because I’m writing this ahead of time—shocking!
** Hey, I was going to try to be all humble and not mention it, but then I decided not to. :)
*** Also, in case you should take the piece too seriously (as some did), no, I do not advocate this type of plan. It was a story, intended for humorous effect, not a real suggestion. 
 

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