The Weekly Vista

Writer and Poets group work on technique

- LYNN ATKINS latkins@nwadg.com

Once a month local writers gather to help each other at the Artist Retreat Center. Village on the Lakes Writers and Poets has about 40 members, organizer Joanie Roberts said, and the group is cosponsore­d by the Artist Retreat Center and the Bella Vista Library.

“Authors can get lonely,” Roberts said. When they get together lively conversati­on ensues. “We have all kinds of surprises, it’s really great.”

The monthly workshop is held from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. the second Wednesday of each month. The next workshop on Aug. 9 has a speaker, poet Kate Lacy, who wants to encourage submission­s for the state fair poetry contest. The deadline is Aug. 15.

There’s also a speakers series held in the evening on the second Tuesday. At 6 p.m. Sept. 12, western author J.C. Crumpton will speak.

At a recent workshop, local author Lori Ericson was on hand to talk about using true life to develop fictional stories. A former newspaper reporter who worked at The Benton County Daily Record and other newspapers in Northwest Arkansas, Ericson used events she covered in Washington County in the 1990s as the basis of her first novel, “A Lovely County.” Her second novel, “A Lovely Murder,” is also out and there will probably be two more in the series.

Her protagonis­t, Danny Edens, is a newspaper reporter, but the story isn’t autobiogra­phical, Ericson said.

“She’s not me,” Ericson said. “She’s prettier, stronger and has a more interestin­g life.”

It’s true, she said, that her parents owned and managed a cemetery when she was growing up — just like her protagonis­t.

“Anyone can turn real life into fiction,” she said, and she supplied a list of suggestion­s starting with writing about “the most exciting thing that ever happened to you.” She encouraged her audience to look at many facets of their own life, including early memories, recent vacations and family history.

Another way to find stories in your own life is to imagine it went a different way. What if you married the boyfriend you left behind, or you had no children, or you had more children? What if you won the lottery and then lost all the money gambling?

You can also clip stories out of newspapers, magazines or from the Internet. Ericson showed her suitcase full of clippings, which she keeps for future inspiratio­n.

But she also cautioned her audience about some pitfalls when writing about true events. For one thing, if you are not fictionali­zing the events, you have to stay true to things that happened and you have to be careful of the participan­t’s feelings.

Also, sometimes true events can seem very unlikely. If a coincidenc­e seems too unbelievab­le, rewrite it, Ericson advised.

Some people may start by writing a truthful version of an event, but then embellish it and let characters go their own way.

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