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Cynthia Kraack

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Tag Archives: Harvesting Ashwood

Simple Peace (Appeared on WordSisters Blog)

Cynthia Kraack Posted on July 29, 2022 by Cynthia KraackJuly 29, 2022

Sixty-six degrees at eight in the morning on July 4 in Door County. My hands smell of lavender from making bouquets and the harvest piles up in an old, rusty green Suburban Garden wagon. The cold spring delayed sprigs maturing, but the first varieties are now ready. These mornings of working at a table with a sweeping view of blooming lavender rows, friends bent over the bushy plants, and collies running offer a respite from news and worries.

Yes, the world is dipping and swaying for huge reasons, and it is hard to be proud of the state of our nation. I couldn’t get into the goofy happiness of a small town 4th of July parade and snapping pictures of kids on decorated tractor wagons and the grocery store staff pushing decorated shopping carts. I haven’t absorbed the sickening news of another mass shooter at a different parade. National discord and gun violence keep Americans in an uncomfortable state of anxiety so I’m looking for moments of simple pleasure to build personal peace of mind. I’m talking really simple pleasures:

Fresh peas, shelled by someone else.

Sunshine and cool air this morning.

Birdsong.

Two fawns playing in a neighbors’ yard.

Straight from the field strawberries.

Farmers market greens and cherry tomatoes.

Giggles of a happy infant granddaughter.

Our eight-year-old granddaughter singing.

Music while working.

A short pile of books.

Family and good friends a call or text away.

Some days you must restore your own core to keep pushing through your role in the bigger world. Here’s hoping you can create a list of simple pleasures to support minutes of personal peace.

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Posted in Blog, Personal Meditation, WordSisters | Tagged Door County, Friends, Harvesting Ashwood, Seasons, Stress Relief | Leave a reply

Winter Weight

Cynthia Kraack Posted on April 10, 2013 by Cynthia KraackApril 10, 2013

Attending literary events lately has led me to the non-scientific observation that writers in this part of the Midwest might eat too many calories per hour while sitting at their computers during extended cold weather. Pictures from a June book release party featured more people in loose fitting clothes in comparison to images from a similar September event. Add in the Minnesota writer living in Los Angeles since the holidays who announced on Facebook that he’s dropped so much weight his pants are falling to his knees.

My conclusion is simple: Writing, as a career in a state with long winters, can be hazardous to your health.

That carry-out lunch can’t be worked off in forty-five minutes at the gym and running on icy paths is plain dangerous.  Most of us indulge in far less sinful eating– rice crackers, a cookie in the afternoon, a handful of pretzels. But there’s not a whole lot of physical activity happening while the mind is wandering and fingers are hitting computer keys. Be honest, most days writing defines sedentary.

A friendly personal trainer pointed to a stability ball as a way to keep the metabolism running while tapping away on the keyboard. A friend in permanent weight watching mode sent a list of ‘healthy’ snacks consisting of a lot of green things. A person employed as a college athletic trainer claims drinking a gallon of water every day will produce a five pound weight loss in two weeks. Not coffee, tea, diet cola. Water. Boring, but possible without braving the elements.

In April winter weather has turned from a tolerated visitor to the equivalent of having Russell Brand as an uninvited houseguest for many, many months. But the need to shed jeans and t-shirts will arrive. I’ve pinned up pictures from our daughter’s September wedding, cleared the office of anything edible, unearthed a jug to tote water upstairs and am honestly tracking everything I eat. None of this helps my writing, but I am hydrated, slightly cranky, and losing weight.

Harvesting Ashwood: Minnesota 2037 will be free for Kindle download April 17 to 21, a writer ‘event’ which requires absolutely no physical visibility to readers. Best not think about how the disappearance of readings and tours could allow writers to stay hidden in their preferred corners with just one cookie or a handful of almonds or  anything that contains calories.

By the way, no fair reminding me that starvation has been a theme in all of my books. Not right now. I’ve got another glass of water to finish.

 

Posted in Blog | Tagged Harvesting Ashwood, Writers, writing work | Leave a reply

Book Trailers

Cynthia Kraack Posted on April 5, 2012 by Cynthia KraackMay 28, 2015

Door County sunsetIf you claim to be in the arts and ignore the force of social media you can only stand to lose some possibility with that decision. Unlike an ad in your local newspaper or a poster pinned up behind the indie bookseller’s computer, online news about music and movies and books might be viewed by someone who lives on the other side of your town, your country, or the world.

Everyone is hurrying to blog or twitter, but this week I’ve been focusing on YouTube while creating the first in a series of book trailers in advance of the release of Harvesting Ashwood: Minnesota 2037. All the word work of writing must be captured in images and music. After proofing galleys and working on press materials, the trailer is a welcome opportunity to spend hours looking at pictures and videos while listening to many kinds of music. Between flipping through personal photos, free online sources, and places like iStockPhoto, days can slip away. Even knowing my own work, this visual process has revealed ways to think about the people and stories in Harvesting Ashwood. A former writing coach encouraged casting a book with actors as a way to develop realistic characters, but this is a deeper process than choosing Tom Selleck instead of Sam Shepard as a grandfatherly figure.

Of course the trailer is one part of a bigger marketing campaign assigned the task of attracting viewers in the crazy world of YouTube. Thirty to forty-five seconds with images changing frequently is not a lot of time to summarize 90,000 words. Since 20% of viewers click away in the first ten seconds and another 13% are gone by twenty seconds, the book trailer is not the place for a talking head (unless you have connection to someone like Stephen Colbert or Bono).

With Windows Live Movie Maker, it is possible to build and pull apart multiple projects. The final result will not in any way resemble the incredible “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo” trailers, but my budget is less than what that production company probably spent on masking tape. My intention is to capture the attention of a few hundred people over the next eight weeks. What I figured out about Harvesting Ashwood while working on the series is a gift that will carry into the final book in the trilogy.

Watch for the first trailer the week of April 9. Think about building a trailer for your next creative project. It’s a good way to think out of the box about your own work.

Posted in Blog | Tagged Harvesting Ashwood, Planning, writing work | Leave a reply

Margaret Atwood at AWP

Cynthia Kraack Posted on February 28, 2012 by Cynthia KraackMay 28, 2015

“The writing of The Handmaid’s Tale gave me a strange feeling, like sliding on river ice—exhilarating but unbalancing. How thin is this ice? How far can I go? How much trouble am I in? What’s down there if I fall? These were writerly questions, having to do with structure and execution, and that biggest question of all, the one every writer asks him- or herself with every completed chapter: Is anyone going to believe this?”

Margaret Atwood, In Other Worlds: SF and the Human Imagination

A great winter evening at home = Adele, a lit fireplace, a soft blanket and Margaret Atwood’s classic works. If writers had groupies, I might be tempted to join hers. The Handmaid’s Tale carried me through sleepless nights of a difficult pregnancy (interesting juxtaposition) and lured me to reread Cat’s Eye. Teamed with Pat Conroy and Anita Shreve, Atwood has been a teacher of how to structure stories, when to challenge readers, the many ways characters present larger than life.

The first time I heard Atwood talk about writing, speculative fiction, and her work was during a twentieth anniversary tour for The Handmaid’s Tale. Talking Volumes, a partnership of the Minnesota Public Radio and the Minneapolis Star Tribune, in collaboration with The Loft, usually attracts older middle-age readers to its interviews with nationally known writers. Atwood drew people across most ages. She didn’t want The Handmaid’s Tale or Oryx and Crake to be relegated to science fiction and pointed out that everything within her works was possible. She didn’t dream up magic potions or whizmos. She merely pushed her creativity to create that ”Ëœstrange feeling’ of being where everything is not quite the same. Not a timid speaker, Atwood provoked thoughtful questions when the floor was opened. She is comfortable with her direction, achievements and taking creative risks.

Today’s political environment provides an interesting backdrop for Atwood’s appearance at the 2012 AWP conference as the keynote speaker. Republican social conservatives rhetoric has opened doors many find uncomfortable. The exact kind of doors Atwood is willing to swing open and explore. It’s fair to say that she resists her body of speculative fiction being placed under the science fiction genre umbrella with its uncomfortable collection of speculative fiction, horror, fantasy, superheroes, and cyberpunk. Atwood may be the most influential writer talking about recognizing works like Handmaid’s as literature as something different.

Writing of a near future world isn’t easy. Reality is, that bar some gigantic environmental or military event, daily life ten or twenty years from now will be a lot like today—kids will be educated, adults will work, the sun will rise, governments will exist. In 2022 your day might be very similar to 2012 with slight alterations—on the simple side new gizmos or foods. Somewhere something might make those alterations significant. Instead of the writer beginning with a human “what if” question defining a character’s story, speculative fiction pushes to a “what if” question that defines the life of characters within an altered society.

My published works are all speculative fiction. Minnesota Cold is the story of an older woman called to lead a revolution. Along with confronting institutionalized production of future laborers and the ability to prolong life, she struggles with deep decisions impacting her family–as a mother and grandmother. While writing Minnesota Cold, I always thought of the book as the story of Sally Dodge who happened to live in the near future. Her past is my present. Her present is what Atwood calls that feeling of sliding on river ice.

For three years I’ve been living with the characters of Ashwood, a family trilogy beginning in the near future following an almost apocalyptic global depression and extending through two decades. On the surface, the trilogy has the comfort of living with a family from formation through the launch of its children as independent adults. But under that surface, this normal cycle takes place during the development of a necessary big government, struggles as the nation’s needs change, and the growth of gigantic corporations which seek to bend the definition of personal self-determination.

My next work may be a more contemporary family novel. But these years spent under the influence of Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale have been creatively satisfying. What a thrill to hear her again at AWP.

Posted in Blog | Tagged AWP, Books, Harvesting Ashwood, Travel, Writers, writing work | Leave a reply

Galleys

Cynthia Kraack Posted on January 23, 2012 by Cynthia KraackMay 24, 2012

One year to write a book. Six months to revise a book. One weekend to review galleys. Time funnels faster as a publication date approaches, but the question about whether a character responds to a situation appropriately on page 52 is still worth pondering before committing to finality. If the scene didn’t read right in writers’ group last winter and you reworked the scene, and the editor questioned pacing last summer, the answer might be way outside my writer’s mind this January. For every one hundred pages that read like silk, there are those paragraphs that you wish you could hide. Unfortunately publishing a book is a bit like a beautiful woman who is obsessed with wearing her hair over unsightly large ears.

How to read galleys? First time read is big picture—where are the dramatic arcs, do characters remain consistent, will the ending satisfy readers. Next time (God forbid) the read is all about the details—commas, spellings, details. As a big picture person, the details bedevil me. Thankfully there was Lynn to pick up the missed details. I should trust her work, but now the galleys scream for re-examination of the minutia.

Time for a deep breath and enjoy the accomplishment of galleys waiting on your desk. This is what writing is all about. The book is real. It has a title (Harvesting Ashwood: Minnesota 2037) and a cover (thanks, Scott) and will have these pages if I finish proofing the galleys.

Posted in Blog | Tagged Harvesting Ashwood, Writers | Leave a reply

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