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Archive for October, 2009

Writer’s Intuition: From the Desk of a Positive Person

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

When I was in college, my roommate came back from summer break with a stack of notepads that she handed out to friends. I don’t remember where she got them, probably from a Dunder Mifflin type salesman looking to dump his samples. Each pad had a person’s name and a positive reinforcement at the top of each sheet. The pad she gave me said, “From the Desk of a Positive Person–Emmett Nelson.” I have no idea who Emmett Nelson is, or if he’s even real, but by the time I used that scratch pad up, I felt a kinship with old Emmett. And yes, I felt pretty positive, too.

I recently started a new proposal that I’m optimistic and excited about. When I was searching around for a name for an important secondary character, the name Emmett Nelson just popped in there. The name seemed to fit my character who is a mature, important, and distinguished man. So I named my guy Emmett Nelson and didn’t think much more about it. A few days later, I was writing the first scene where Emmett appears. As I wrote, I realized the name has a fun and unexpected nuance to it that I’d never thought of consciously. It is the perfect name for my character. How did this happen? Did my subconscious know what my conscious mind couldn’t see? Did my subconscious build on what my conscious mind had chosen? However it happens, I love it when it does. I call this writer’s or creative intuition. I wish I could bottle it up for those days when I don’t have a creative thought in my body, but it doesn’t seem to work that way.

From the Desk of a Positive Person–Gina Robinson

Baskets and Other Joys of Writers’ Conferences

Sunday, October 18th, 2009

Last weekend I had the great pleasure to attend  and speak at the Emerald City Writers’ Conference, something I look forward to every year. This year’s conference committee did their usual stellar job. The conference was a blast. Oh, and informative, too.

There are few things more fun than a writers’ conference. Old friends, new friends, fans, publishing professionals, and writers galore, all of whom can talk books until their voices give out. For a lifelong book lover like me, what’s not to love?

Last year my husband gave me a camera so I could capture my writers’ conference memories.  I find that I tend to get a lot of pictures of me eating with my friends and fellow attendees. Here’s a typical example.Dinner at ECWC09While I love these pictures, I wish I would have taken a few photos of some of the things people may not expect at conferences, like the always fun and fabulous basket raffle the Emerald City holds. Part of the proceeds go to support a local shelter for victims of domestic violence. This year people donated over sixty baskets. The tables holding them spanned the entire length of the banquet hall. Wouldn’t that have been a fun picture?

Here are a few photos I do have. The first one is a picture of the basket my critique partners and I donated. Besides having some great books, it also had a $50 gift card to a local spa and a $50 gift card to a national movie theater chain.

Girls' Night Out Basket Donated by my critique group

Girls' Night Out Basket Donated by my critique group

And lucky me! I won this law enforcement basket donated by Julia Hunter. It was full of research books, many I’d had my eye on, including Forensics by D.P. Lyle, which was on my “to buy” list. Now no one will believe me when I tell them I never win anything.

The Law Enforcement Basket

Law Enforcement Basket I won, donated by Julia Hunter

Another thing many people may not realize–at least at romance conferences, speakers often get gifts. Here’s this year’s speaker gift basket, put together by Laron Glover at the wonderful and creative Ninth Moon. If you need a gift for a writer, or you’re a writer looking for promo items, check Ninth Moon out.

Speakers Gift Basket

ECWC 2009 Speaker Gift

The Beauty of Flight

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

Last night, I got to tour the Boeing Customer Experience Center in Seattle, WA, something usually reserved for airlines and associated aviation groups. The center is high tech, beautiful, and filled with the wonders of modern flight. I wish I could adequately describe all the wonders of the center–globes lit with the current weather across the planet, ceilings that look like skies with planes flying overhead, electronic maps of all the flights currently in progress, and so much more. As part of the tour, we got to see the mock-ups for all of Boeing’s current planes, including the new 787. Talk about a simply gorgeous interior. And we got to fly the flight simulator. All I can say about how well I did in the simulator is–don’t look for me to be your pilot any time soon.

How does this apply to writing? As writers we’re always looking for new experiences. I also think it sparks the creative mind to see innovation and creativity in different venues.

Thank you, Boeing!

Boeing's Flight Simulator