Stepping into the forest of my mind

Stepping into the forest of my mind
Just as every journey begins with a first step, every story begins with the first word.

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Make Memoirs Unique



Hush, the writer is thinking.
What makes my memoir different?  A very good question. 


If you’ve been reading memoirs, you’ll notice that each experience is unique, whether the memoir is about childhood, death, surviving divorce, or even surviving college.  Through specific details, the memoirist achieves universality. 
 

            Of course universality is not enough.  I need to show my hard-won epiphanies through self-reflection.  This is the difficult part for me.  I’m a scene writer.  I need action.  I enjoy the comic moments of raising a family in all their hilarious detail. 

 

“You need more internal dialogue here, Victoria,” my critique partner told me.

And of course she was correct.  But to look inside myself?

 

Perhaps I had been too busy raising that family of mine and hammering away at my bachelor’s degree to pause and reflect about how I felt when my children constantly interrupted my studying time or when I was attempting to make study tapes for various classes.           

 

            I need to fill my memoir with self-made maxims and self-wisdom learned, not so much the subject matter learned.  My college memoir is a candid story of self-improvement through the college education of a mother.  My children’s presence punctuates my college experience.

I remained their primary care-giver and continued to teach them from my newfound knowledge base.

 

            Are these maxims easy to find?  No.  In fact, I find myself spending whole days trying to figure out “how I felt” or “what I learned” at a particular time during my college journey.  It gets to the point where I need to convince myself that it’s good enough for the first revision and then move on.

 

            How do you get past a sticking point in your manuscripts?  Please offer some tips.  

6 comments:

  1. Interesting that you need internal monologue because people usually have too much of that! You're showing more than telling.

    Good luck as you continue.

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    1. Thanks, Theresa. Yes, I'm more action and scene rather than reflection. But in memoir--it seems--the reader wants to know how you felt about a certain experience. Can I fill out my memoir with enough reflection and explanation to satisfy an agent or publisher? Yikes! Here's hoping.

      Thanks you so much for visiting my Adventures in Writing blog. It is greatly appreciated.

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  2. I wish you all the luck while you complete your memoir.

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    1. Thank you so much, Michelle. Yes, the memoir continues to be a large part of my daily--when I can--writing. I appreciate your visiting my blog and leaving comments. Thanks again!

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  3. All the best with your memoir.

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  4. Thank you so much, Nas, for visiting my Adventures in Writing blog. Yes, I'm going to need good wishes in order to satisfy the needs of this memoir. Knowing what the memoir needs and supplying the missing pieces are two different abilities. I hope I can do it!

    Thanks again for reading my Adventures in Writing blog post.

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