Tag: saints and sinners
The gift of friends
I had a post all written for today, then I realized it’s the special day of two friends, and I want to talk about both of them instead.
Come to my window
Hump Day Happy–and some New Orleans photos
I won’t be able to scurry around town snapping photos today, but if you want one of 14,000 things to be happy about from this book:
just comment with a page number from 1 to 612 and another number between 1 and 30.
While you’re waiting for me to consult the book, you might enjoy some more New Orleans photos.
Last year, David and Shannon were walking through the Quarter when David noticed the Place d’Armes Hotel. David thought it looked like a promising place to stay. When everyone got back home, Shannon called and got information about the hotel and arranged a block of rooms with special rates. Although it ended up that Shannon wasn’t able to go to Saints and Sinners this year, David, ‘Nathan, and Lisa booked rooms at the Place d’Armes. Since all their rooms are non-smoking, Mark, Timothy, Rob, and I figured we’d stay in smoking rooms at the festival’s host hotel, the Bourbon Orleans. Unfortunately for the smokers among us, without warning, the Bourbon Orleans went all non-smoking on May 1.
Both places have plenty of features to recommend them. Both are in great locations. The Bourbon Orleans is convenient for the festival, has nice rooms, and has a gorgeous courtyard with a sparkling pool. I only saw Lisa’s room at the Place d’Armes, but it was spacious and charming. The Place d’Armes pool didn’t seem as clean, but the courtyards are lush. Especially good for us was that the courtyards didn’t close at ten p.m. as the courtyard does at the Bourbon Orleans. So Friday, Saturday, and Sunday nights, after meetings and parties and meals, a few of us gathered around the pool area at the Place d’Armes and talked (and smoked, because that’s okay outside), and enjoyed our sport of the weekend: Tormenting David Puterbaugh.
And on that Friday evening in New Orleans…
The Saints and Sinners kickoff party was at the W Hotel courtyard on Friday evening. That afternoon, I had to run some errands, including buying a hairbrush or two at Wal-Mart, since that was something I forgot to pack. Thanks to Greg’s excellent directions, I got to Wal-Mart with no problem. I think ALL cities should have roads that dead-end into the parking lots of mega stores like Wal-Mart, Costco, etc. It’s very handy. Cities, take note: My personal preferences would be Target, the Container Store, and Michael’s. Oh, and Walgreen’s, since I spend half my life there anyway.
But back to New Orleans. Since gallivanting through the city on foot wasn’t in the cards this trip, I decided to drive to the W Hotel from Wal-Mart. Of course, I’d failed to get directions back, but Mark G. Harris led me to the hotel by cell phone. Or he tried. I was being very stressed out and uncooperative. Yet he managed not to click his phone shut and blow me off. See why I say the G is for Galahad?
Once in the courtyard, I flopped down on a comfy bench and did very little mingling. Between MGH and FARB, liquid refreshment was kept in front of me (Coca Cola, because I was high enough on pain meds all weekend–‘Nathan, did I really meet you, or just hallucinate it?).
I didn’t get a swag bag, but I did get some photos, and I offer them to you now.
Button Sunday
On this day in 1803, Edward Bulwer-Lytton, dramatist and novelist, was born in London. Even if you’ve never read any of his work, you are no doubt familiar with the first line of his novel Paul Clifford:
If only Snoopy could do what I did on a Friday in New Orleans at Saints and Sinners. The first master class I attended was Stephen McCauley’s “Real Live Characters.”
I’ve already mentioned that I’m crazy about Stephen McCauley’s work, so much so that I, along with Tim, would have had the honor of inducting him into the Saints and Sinners Hall of Fame had he not been forced to leave the festival early because of a family emergency.
One of McCauley’s points was about collaboration between writers–not so much contributing to the same work, as I have with my writing partners, but even working in the same environment. Tim and I know the value of sharing the same space and writing independently of each other but still establishing an atmosphere of creative energy that benefits us both.
I was amused when McCauley had us do a writing exercise, and I had paper and pen to loan Tim, who had nothing to write with or on, but he had all kinds of ideas that he began furiously scribbling. Whereas I sat there hissing, “I don’t have a character… I don’t have but one thing inside a character’s imagined bedside table… I don’t know what to write…” etc.
At different times, one of us may meet the mechanical needs of our efforts, and the other may meet our creative needs. This is collaboration.
Jim Grimsley’s master class was canceled when his plans to attend the festival were changed at the last minute. During our down time, Tim kindly picked up lunch for us, then it was time to attend Mark Doty’s class, “The Challenges of the Memoir.”
Even as a person who has no plans to write any kind of memoir or autobiography, I knew this was a class I couldn’t miss. I’ve read Doty’s three volumes of his memoirs and most of his poetry, and I’ve heard him speak before. My instincts were right, because his exercises for helping writers remember and shape their personal histories into a narrative are just as useful for creating a fictional character’s history.
One of my most treasured books is this one, in which Mark Doty wrote:
And I was.
If you’re reading this and you’re a person who dreams of finishing your novel or crafting your poetry, take every advantage you can to learn from brilliant writers like Stephen McCauley and Mark Doty–and be persistent.
New Orleans, Part 1: The road there
Since it’s going to be a scorching three-day weekend, I’ll be inside dividing my Saints and Sinners/New Orleans photos into several posts, just in case you’re not out spending your tax incentive checks or whatever they’re called, or cooking over a grill, or sharing time with friends, or otherwise living it up on the holiday.
Lynne has promised me that she’s going to spend much of her weekend here figuring out what my yard needs. I think it needs Tommy Clyde, myself.
Somewhere on I-10 East on the way to New Orleans,
Fools For Love
You would think, looking at my photos, that I sought a co-editor and contributors to the anthology Fool For Love: New Gay Fiction on the basis of handsomeness alone. You’d be wrong to think that, however, as I can’t imagine a more talented group of writers. It makes me want to start another anthology right now just so I can invite them to contribute.
The post in which I gush about Stephen McCauley
Saints and Sinners Literary Festival organizer Paul J. Willis and writer Stephen McCauley
Timothy and I were asked to induct Stephen McCauley into the Saints and Sinners Hall of Fame. Unfortunately, Stephen had to leave the festival to take care of personal business before the closing ceremonies on Sunday. Though we regretted his absence, we were lucky enough to attend his Master Class on creating unforgettable characters. Not only did he give us useful exercises to learn about and build our characters, but he also talked about the values of creating in the company of other writers, certainly a subject dear to the hearts of two writers who have worked as a team.
When I was initially approached to induct him, I nervously asked, Why me? and was told it was because I’m such an outspoken fan of his work. This is true. Later, when Timothy and I asked Stephen for biographical information and told him how we love his novels, in the most charming, self-effacing way, he was happy about the possibility that we wanted to focus on his work rather than on him. It’s so lovely to meet an author whose writing I admire who also exceeds all my expectations for who he might be as a person. I’m so happy to have had the opportunity to meet him, and I would have loved to have stood next to Timothy and made this induction.
Without further fanfare, this is what we’d planned to say about Stephen McCauley and his work. It would probably have been over-long, but we didn’t care, and we were told by our Saints and Sinners contacts that we were free to gush.
Photo Friday, No. 95
Current Photo Friday theme: Professional
I have so few photos from the Saints and Sinners Literary Festival in New Orleans that I like as photographs, even though there are many that I like of friends.
However, I’m quite happy with the exuberance of this shot of writers Aaron Hamburger, Amie M. Evans, and Timothy J. Lambert.