Friday, January 29, 2016

KEYNOTE SPEECH AT OWFI

Hi folks,

Last year, I was privileged to be asked by then-president Dawn Allen to be the keynote speaker at the Oklahoma Writers Federation Inc. annual convention in Oklahoma City and this is the speech I gave. Hope you enjoy it.



Oklahoma Writers Federation Inc. Keynote address--2015
The Building Blocks of Story
Hi! My name is Les and I’m an alco—oops! Wrong meeting! My name is Les Edgerton and I’m a writer. I’m really happy to be here and to impart to all of you all of the secrets you’ll ever need to becoming a bestselling author, one whose books all get made into movies, where you’re asked to do cameos in the blockbuster flicks they make of your work, and literally roll around in filthy lucre. Your books will all get rave reviews in the NY Times. You’ll dine always at Spago’s and Elaine’s and never again dream of going through the drive-thru at MacDonald’s. You’ll have to block the phone numbers of all those New York publishers who are driving you crazy calling and wanting to publish your novels. Of course, I’ve not done any of those things personally, but don’t worry. I have the secrets and when you leave here, you’ll have all the tools necessary to achieve fame and fortune in the writing world.

Guaranteed.

Once you leave here, you’ll never again need to read a craft book, attend a conference like this, join a writer’s group, or read another novel to see how he or she does it. You’re going to get all the secrets right here! All you have to worry about is which island you’re going to buy to retire to…

That’s the good news. And now, for some not-so-good news… What we like to call “the truth…” See? You should have just drunk the Kool-Aid and gone to the bar…

First, you need to know that not everything in writing can be taught. For instance, do you really think that anyone could study with William Faulkner for five years and then emerge writing as well as he could? Perhaps, but most likely not. There are some writers who can do things that no one else in the world ever can.

Here’s a true story that illustrates why this is. Barry Bonds was interviewed one time, and his answer to a reporter’s question showed clearly how some things can never be taught.
The article:
ON AUG. 18, 2001, after it became a foregone conclusion that Bonds would make a run at McGwire's single-season home run record, he hit a pitch from Jason Marquis -- 94 mph, chest-high, on the fists -- for his 54th homer. It wasn't his most memorable homer, but the physics of it were astounding.
About two weeks later, I interviewed him for a story in The Magazine. I asked him to take me through that 2-2 pitch: what he was thinking, what he was looking for, how he refined his swing to be short and quick enough to get the barrel to it. He refused. He wasn't nasty; he just felt it was a senseless exercise.
"I just have it," he said. "I can't explain it. You either have it or you don't, and I do. People always think there's an answer to everything, but there isn't. How can you do that? I don't know. I just can. When people see something they've never seen before, the first thing they say is, 'How did you do that?' The next thing is, 'Can you teach me?' The answer is no because you don't have it."
That quote, and the laugh that followed, is the essence of Bonds. His career was played to the backdrop of four words: You can't do this. Equal parts arrogance and truth, it became an unspoken mantra. It's the same mentality he used to separate himself from the game's pedestrian details. He routinely refused to show up for team photos during his years with the Giants. He stretched with his own stretching coach in the clubhouse rather than with his teammates on the field. He was notoriously stingy in providing assistance to teammates, acting as if their mundane talents were contagious. His knowledge would remain the property of the one person who could use it best: Bonds himself.
His grandiosity knew few bounds. He arrived at his first spring training with the Giants with a chauffeur. Replete with black suit and tie, Dennis drove Bonds to and from the ballpark for six weeks in February and March of 1993. It was Barry being Barry, but within the clubhouse it was seen as a brazen act of hubris.
And the crazy thing was: He knew better. It wasn't an inability to read the room or a mistaken belief that teammates would understand how a man of his stature might need to display the gilded trappings of his success. It was a calculated effort to separate himself from the rank and file. You either have it or you don't, and I do.
(End of article)

The same concept applies to the truly great writers. What they do can’t be taught. That doesn’t mean you can’t be as great or even greater than those folks were—it just means you can’t do what they did. You may end up doing something even greater but it won’t be what they did—it’ll be something your own peculiar genius allowed you to do. This is not bad news—this is reality.
            This is so crucial to learn. If you want to write like a Faulkner or a Hemingway, you probably won’t be able to achieve the particular mastery they had. Does that mean you’re doomed to mediocrity? Of course not! Bonds couldn’t pitch like Roger Clemens no matter how good a baseball player he was. Even though he was a good base stealer, he couldn’t steal bases the way Ricky Henderson could. And, even though he ended up being the home run champion of all time, he didn’t operate in a vacuum. There were hundreds of other major leaguers playing at the same time he was and they were all successful. Just being on a major league roster is the equivalent of being a bestselling author in the world of literature. Raymond Carver couldn’t write what Flannery O’Connor wrote and if she’d been alive, during his career, she probably couldn’t write what he did. But, guess what? They’re both great short story writers. When Hemingway wrote, there were many, many other writers who were successful as well. The same with every other famous or great writer.
            I just want to create a realistic picture for you as writers. Many things about writing can be taught. Many other things cannot be taught. It’s important to learn what you’re capable of learning and what can’t realistically be taught to you. Or anyone.
            I want to talk today about how to become the best writer you can be and hopefully show you some ways to shorten the time between when you first begin to write and when you’ve arrived as a good writer yourself.

First, if you’re writing a novel, it’s very important to understand the building blocks of story. There are two building blocks:
1. Scene
2. Sequel
            The scene is a sequence of actions. This happened, which led to this happening, which led to this… and so on. In a contemporary novel, the first action that needs to appear in the narrative is the inciting incident. This is very important. In older times, we could begin more leisurely. We could begin with backstory or extensive setup. No longer.
            A novel is about one thing only—trouble. And, trouble in a novel is about an individual with a compelling story problem. It’s not about a bad situation—it’s about a bona fide, precise problem that can be clearly identified. And, it’s that problem that is going to occupy every page of the novel until the end. Once the problem is resolved, the story’s over. And, in novel terms, the story problem has two components. One, it’s a surface problem, and two, it’s a story-worthy problem. Both are mirror images of each other. I won’t go into the difference and the sameness here—if you’re interested, it’s in my book Hooked.
            In a movie, about all that are possible are scenes—units of action. However, in a novel, you’ve got an additional building block that makes a novel a far better form than a movie. In a novel, you also have the building block of sequel.
            Sequel is the aftermath of scene. It’s a moment of reflection, where the character makes sense of the action. It’s where we get to see his or her inner thoughts and emotions. It’s where flashbacks are allowed, where necessary backstory can emerge. It’s where the next plan of action is planned by the protagonist.
            Both are necessary in a good novel. If one is weak, the novel as a whole will suffer. It’s your job as the writer to make sure both work equally well. If the action scenes are weak or boring, it doesn’t matter how well-written the sequel is. If the action is strong but the sequel is weak, it becomes what my wife Mary calls a mindless chasey-fighty story or worse.
            The best way to make a novel work is to alternate the two elements. A bit of action, then a bit of sequel. That can vary, of course. You can have two, three, four scenes in a row, and then a sequel. The opposite rarely works however, where you have sequel, sequel, sequel, action. That usually leads to a interior monolog novel that only close relatives will read. The best way to construct a novel is to alternate the two elements, and maybe occasionally, having scene follow scene. Toward the conclusion of the novel, it’s best to have multiple scenes. It’s a pacing technique that helps create a page-turner. By that time, the reader should be well aware of the character’s feeling and thought processes and sequel can be shortened quite a bit. We kind of know how the character’s mind operates by then. There isn’t a formula to use in mixing scene and sequel, but a good estimate would be about 60% scene and 40% sequel. That isn’t hard and fast, however. Very good novels have been written with an 80%-20% ratio. The opposite usually won’t work. To have a novel weighted more toward sequel would almost always result in a mostly boring book.
            A great book to explain all this in more detail is Jack Bickham’s Scene and Sequel.
            Now. Here’s something you won’t hear much about, but which is one of the reasons a lot of stories writers attempt don’t work. It’s because of that advice to “get it down as quickly as you can and then rewrite it.” The problem with this is that very often the writer begins with a poorly-defined idea of the story they want to write. Too often, they begin what Blake Snyder called “The smell of the rain on the road at dawn.” As he says: “I can be driving down the street and see a guy with a t-shirt and think ‘That’s a story!!’ Is it? Doubtful. It may be the start of an idea, but for now it’s that thing all creative people get—if they’re lucky—the beginning of art, but in and of itself, only interesting to you.”
            Far too often, this is how many writers begin to write a novel. With nothing more than this. They feel that if they can just get a lot of stuff down, then later on they can go back and begin cutting away the dead wood and somehow sculpt what they have into a story. Almost always, this is a strategy doomed to failure. This is akin to a housewife dreaming of her dream house one night and then waking up and getting together a crew to build it. If the housewife is a billionaire and can keep tearing down the old mistakes and improving it, bit by bit, perhaps she can eventually build that house. Even then, it probably won’t resemble the house she dreamed of. But, yet, this is what many writers do. They’ve also bought into that chestnut that “ideas are cheap.” Actually, ideas are cheap—however, solid story ideas that a novel can be created from are very dear and rare. That myth that any writer worth their salt has dozens and dozens if not thousands of ideas laying around in the ol’ brain pan and the only real problem is that they won’t live long enough to get ‘em all written. The truth is, most of those millions of ideas are nothing more than the “smell of the rain on the road in the morning.” It takes far more than that to create a viable novel.
            The truth is, good story ideas aren’t that easy to come by. Ideas—or fragments of ideas—are everywhere—but actual story ideas aren’t as common as folks would have you believe.
            My own novel writing process begins with a story idea. But… and here’s a big BUT… that idea has to percolate in my brain and imagination from anywhere from five to ten years on average before it’s ready to be written. That doesn’t mean when I finish a novel, I have to start from scratch and wait five or ten years to write the next one. At any given time, I have about ten story ideas I’ve been thinking about for many years until it’s matured enough to begin writing it. I daresay most of you have the same experience. Those are the stories you should be writing—not those “the smell of the rain” sudden inspirations that come to you. Those are the sparks that light the novel ideas but they haven’t yet achieved the level of story yet. Let them percolate in your brain awhile. A long while. Eventually, most of them will wither away and die… and they should. The ones that remain—that you can’t shake—those are the worthwhile ideas and have a chance to become a novel.
            The main point I want to make here is to be sure your novel idea is really a story before you begin the arduous task of creating it on paper.
            Most successful novelists do this and even so, with the best-laid plans, will end up not finishing the novel. Very often, that novel idea you had just doesn’t work. This is when you have to be ruthless and… KILL IT. While, yes, it’s possible to eventually wrestle a novel to the floor and create something publishable, you have to know when a particular work just isn’t going to become viable, not without a huge sacrifice of time and blood and sweat and tears. More time, more blood and more sweat and tears than it’s going to be worth. This isn’t something you’ll hear very often. Most of the advice is that one should never quit. All kinds of examples are trotted out where a writer spent ten years on a book (or more!) and the result was a masterpiece. What they usually don’t tell you is that for every writer who succeeds like this, there are a thousand who eventually gave up entirely. Or, that if the masterpiece writer had abandoned the work earlier, they might have written five other books during that time that were just as good or possibly even better. This kind of thing comes about as a result of a culture that says quitting anything is always a bad thing. Just remember that this isn’t Little League where your dad is screaming at you to: “Never quit, Johnny! Only losers quit!” And you go on, day after miserable day, trying to do the impossible, and in the end, succeed only in prolonging the inevitable truth that: You suck at baseball and aren’t ever going to get any better, at least in a reasonable amount of time, by, say the age of fifty-five.
            Here’s the good news. We’re all grown up now and don’t have to listen to the adults in our house screaming at us to Never Quit! It’s perfectly okay to quit under the right circumstances. Remember, you’re not quitting writing—you’re quitting a novel that is unlikely to work. And, you’ll know if it’s a novel that you should persevere with or not. Just listen to the sane voice in your head.
            This doesn’t mean that you should give up on every project that proves difficult. Most novels don’t come easily. But, there’s a difference between a difficult task and an impossible one. Make sure you know the difference. Most successful novelists I know end up finishing about one out of every three novels that they begin. And, that’s after they’ve winnowed out probably dozens if not hundreds of ideas.
            Learn to enjoy the killing of such a novel. It’s by killing the losers that you’re letting the healthy ones live. Not enough is said about the value of abandoning crap. If it’s crap—and you should be able to tell the difference—reworking it endlessly ain’t gonna turn it into a bouquet of roses. Learn to be a cold-blooded assassin.
            Here’s another truism. All novels in the beginning stages of writing them are trying to be crap. At the first moment you put something on paper, it’s trying to be really bad, it’s trying to be boring, to be unstructured, to be pointless, it’s trying to be digressive. You have to prop it up at every stage if it’s going to be any good. You have to be really an assassin, going after the boring parts, and going to the parts that really get to your heart and propping them up even more. If you think you’re going to “fix it later” I think you’re going to eventually discover that doesn’t happen. You have to be ruthless. And, immediately. Anything that has a chance at being good means you’re going to have to be really, really tough. This is why I’m adamantly against the advice to “get it down lickety-split while in the throes of the muse… and then go back later to fix it.” If you’ve tried that and don’t have much in the way of publication to show for it, that’s maybe a clue that it doesn’t work. Every bumper sticker piece of writing advice isn’t good.
            Failure is a big part of success. (I sound like a Dale Carnegie ad, don’t I!) But, it’s true. We have to fail, over and over and over. It’s by failing that eventually we begin to win. Eventually, if you keep on writing, you’re going to stumble onto something you’re writing that’s so compelling, so good, so memorable and special… that the five or ten projects you began and abandoned just don’t matter. They’re just what you had to go through to get to the good stuff finally.
            And now, here’s the biggest secret of all. What writing teachers and craft books, mostly never tell you.
            Most of us begin writing because we know clearly what good writing looks like. We’ve simply read so danged much, we know good writing the instant we encounter it. We want to write because we LOVE good writing.
            So, we begin writing and for the first few years there’s this gap. What we’re getting down just isn’t that good. It’s trying to be great, but it just isn’t making it. Your writing isn’t all that good, but what’s still the same is that you still know what good writing looks like. And, yours isn’t matching up. Your taste in what’s good writing is killer, but what’s disappointing is that your own effort doesn’t measure up. It’s trying to be good but you can tell it’s crappy.
            And this is when a lot of writers give up. Try as hard as you can, you just can’t seem to create to the same standard as what you know is good. This is when lots of writers quit. Here’s a secret. Almost all successful writers went through the same thing. Most spent years knowing that what they were creating wasn’t as good as what they knew to be good writing. They knew they were falling short. They knew it didn’t have that special “thing” they wanted it to have. Here’s the thing: EVERYBODY goes through this. EVERYBODY. You have to know that this is totally normal and that we all go through the same thing. You’re not the only person to experience this gap between what you know to be good writing and the crap you’re putting out. The difference is the successful writers plow through this period in their lives. The unsuccessful ones don’t—they quit before they should.
            The most important thing you can do during this phase of your writing career is simple. DO A LOT OF WRITING. Do a huge volume of work. Write every single day. Set yourself deadlines that you convince yourself you have to stick to. So many words a day or week. So many stories finished by such and such a day. It’s only by going through a volume of work that you’re going to catch up and narrow that gap between that good writing you recognize in others and your own work. If you stay the course it will happen. This is the point at which most writers quit. Don’t let that be you. Trust that you will emerge from this a good writer.
            In my own case, that took about ten years. I even got stuff published during that time. But, only rarely. I came close to quitting many times. Just thought I’d never arrive at the place where I was consistently good. That’s a crushing thing to feel. And, I know a lot of you feel that way right now. I’ve been there—I know.
            During this time, I even got books published. My first novel even won an award—it was awarded a Special Citation by the Violet Crown Book Award. But, I wasn’t a good writer yet. That would take another ten years before I could consistently get down on paper the kind of material that matched up to what I knew was good writing.
            It takes awhile. It’s going to take you each awhile if you aren’t there yet. It’s normal to take awhile and you simply have to fight through it and keep writing. And, when you emerge, you’ll be fierce. You’ll be a warrior!
            There is a major pitfall most of us fall into. When you first pick up a pen or turn on the computer, there’s a tendency to write outside of our own voices. To sound… like a writer. Or, what we mistakenly think a writer sounds like. We’ll want to sound like Faulkner or Flannery O’Connor or even John Grisham, for example. Whoever. The problem is, there’s already a Faulkner. There’s no room for a Faulkner, Junior. We already have the real deal. We need writers who sound like themselves. Who write in their one-of-a-kind, original-diginal voices. Who are themselves on the page. Once we begin to accept that our own voice has value and is interesting, then we’ve made a quantum leap toward matching up our vision of what is good and your own work.
(If you're interested in finding your own voice a bit quicker, you might glom onto this one.)

            Here’s where the crux of the problem lies, I believe. That standard of good writing we’re trying to match is viewed incorrectly by us and it takes time to learn this. We’re only paying attention to the outward voice of the writer. And, this is where we keep falling down. We’re trying to mimic that particular voice. And, that’s the one thing we should be avoiding. It’s like a person who wants to be a TV broadcast journalist and his hero is Walter Cronkite. Cronkite is his standard of excellence. This guy doesn’t realize that we already have a Walter Cronkite and that no one is looking for a Cronkite, Junior. Or, pick a contemporary broadcaster, doesn’t matter who. Virtually no one in the audience wants a clone or twin of that person. But, we know that that person is the standard of excellence. So what happens to all of these bright-eyed wannabe broadcasters? Well, to many of them, the same thing happens to the writer whose idea of a good writer is say William Faulkner. They begin to imitate the “master.” And this is why it often takes years and years before the gap between the standard and our own writing begins to narrow. We’re mostly looking at the outward manifestation of their art. In the case of the broadcaster, they begin to assume the personal tics of Cronkite. The speech patterns he favors. The way he emphasizes certain words and parses his sentences. His steely stare. Maybe even his haircut and suit choice. In the case of the writer who holds Faulkner up as his standard of excellence, he or she might do the same things. They look at the cadence of his sentence, the vocabulary choices Faulkner makes, the syntax of his prose, etc. That person is looking at the superficial aspects of Faulkner but never dig into the real thing that he’s doing. They’re looking at superficial artifacts. We’ve all probably done that. We look at the words on the page and think that if we can just learn to string together similarly-sounding sentences we’ll have arrived. Alas, it does not and cannot work that way. We need to instead be looking at the attitude, the personal stance of the writer to his story, the emotions of the writer toward his or her work. We need to focus on our own emotional stances toward what we want to write. When we learn to do that, we begin to formulate our own voices and when that day arrives, we will have become good writers. Warriors. You just have to keep pushing through all that junk and one day it will happen. Our writing will no longer be crap and we’ll have become… warriors.
            And this is what I wish for everyone here.
            I hope this gives you some food for thought and that you find it helpful.
            Don’t give up too soon.
Here are some other things to consider:
  1. Have something worth saying.In his book Culture Care, artist Makoto Fujimura tells a story he confesses may be legendary about a Yale student taking Hebrew from the great Old Testament scholar Brevard Childs. The student, discontent with his grades, asked the scholar how he could raise them. Childs’s answer: “Become a deeper person.”
Peggy Noonan, writer of seven books on politics, religion, and culture, and weekly columnist forThe Wall Street Journal,  at one time the speech writer for the man considered The Great Communicator—Ronald Reagan. In her book Simply Speaking, she says that what moves people in a speech is the logic. The words “Tear down this wall, Mr. Gorbachev” are not all that poetic when taken at face value. But they express something that resonates in the human heart. In the words of Robert Frost, “Something is there that doesn’t love a wall.”
In the same way that logic is what moves people in a speech, logic is what moves people in writing. And to have logic, to move people, we must have something worth saying. In fact, probably about 90% of writing is having something worth saying. And how do we get something worth saying? By expanding the world of ideas to which we expose ourselves and by cultivating a rich inner life.
  1. Decrease your vision. That is, “think local.” Start with your family. Doug Bender, the bestselling author of I Am Second: Real Stories. Changing Lives. wrote a book for an audience of one. When Doug’s wife had a miscarriage, it grieved the Bender’s little girl. So Doug wrote a child’s book about death and loss just for her.
A seminary professor told his students, “Stop thinking you will go out and save the world, and instead become the best family member you can be, the most grateful child of your parents, the greatest and most dependable encourager in your church, the best contributor to your community.” We influence the world one small corner at a time. Cherish the small.
In the days when Abraham’s descendants had been carried off from Israel to Babylon, their prophet, Jeremiah, sent a letter to King Nebuchadnezzar for the surviving leaders in exile. Jeremiah’s counsel: “Build houses and settle down; plant gardens and eat what they produce…. Seek the peace and prosperity of the city to which I have carried you into exile” (Jere. 29:1–7). Seeking the good of the city where we live is always good counsel. So write for your kids, if you have any. Contribute good columns to the local paper. Donate some book reviews for your favorite local web site. Do readings at the library. And do so simply to give back and because you wish to make your corner of the world a better place.
  1. Write what contributes to human flourishing, not what you perceive as the next hot market. Trying to predict what will sell is like leaning on cobwebs. Just about the time you find a post to rest against, it gives way. By the time you finish writing a book to meet demand, the market will have left you in the dust. So write what you love to write and/or what you can write with excellence.
  2. Measure success accurately. You will be tempted to measure your own success by a number of externals that have nothing to do with your worth. Tell yourself they are lies.
The only human-made structure visible from space was not the Golden Gate Bridge or the Eiffel Tower or even the tallest building in the world, but only the Great Wall of China. Think of all the amazing structures that “failed” to make that list.
But that does not make these structures failures. It just means that when measured by one narrow definition of success, they failed. As writers, any number of false measures can make us feel like losers. Did our last book fail to earn out its advance? Did we do a book tour? Did the work gain rave reviews in Publishers Weekly and Library Journal? These are not accurate measures of whether we can write. Lots of crummy books sell big. Many divergent books make their authors lots of money, but that does not make the books or the authors successes.
So measure not by money or fame, but in influence on human flourishing. And of course, that is impossible to measure. Which is precisely my point.
To sum up: stay the course. Everybody goes through the period where what they create doesn’t match up with their sense of what’s good writing. You simply have to keep on working and eventually you’ll emerge and it will. This is the point where we lose most writers. Don’t be one of those who quit just before they attain the prize.
In closing, let me quote the words of that immortal philosopher, Red Green, who says: Keep your stick on the ice. We’re all in this together and I’m pulling for you.
Thank you.

 Les Edgerton


Saturday, January 9, 2016

AUDITOR POSITIONS ARE OPEN




Hi folks,

Well, our latest bootcamp class session has ended and in about a week (Jan. 17) a new, ten-week session will be beginning. I’ve heard from several people who are interested in joining us, but alas, we only had two openings for writers this time and both were filled from the auditors who were on board last session. This is the first place we always go to when we need new class members.

Our auditor program has been a resounding success for the several years we’ve had it. Basically, auditors have access to everything we do in class at all times. They see how we operate, how we present our work, how it’s critiqued, and are privy to all the many conversations about craft the members have. It’s exactly like sitting in class with the only proviso that they can’t participate actively. Many auditors have told me that they learned more by sitting on the sidelines observing that they did in their university classes on writing. We are a serious group, with but one goal—that every member become published and published well. Our track record in that regard is excellent. And, we expect that goal to continue next session. As many as six writers will have finished the novels they’ve been working on in class and I believe all of them will find a legitimate publisher. A few nearing the completion of their novels have already secured good agents and are just putting the final polish on their manuscripts.

Which means that we will probably have several openings in the following session. Not that many—most who finish their novels opt to remain in class as they work on their next work. People who are already in class always have first dibs on being in the next session. When we do have openings, we’ll solicit from the ranks of the current auditors. If openings are not filled thusly, we then open it up to anyone who applies. This rarely happens.

A few years ago in Scottsdale with some of the class. Holly, Linda, moi, Mary and Maegan.


The purpose of this post is to let people know that we are always open to auditors. There are no limits on the number of auditors who can join us, simply because we don’t have to take any time for their work. It’s that simple. That’s also the reason we maintain class size at 10-12 people each session. That’s the number of participants that we can serve properly and fairly and thoroughly. Any more than that, we would run into a time problem. Both myself and all the class members take significant time to read and comment on the submissions each week, and if we added more to class, we’d have to spend less time on everyone else’s work and we’re just not going to do that.

The way class works, the class is divided into two groups. Holly Love, our class administrator and member herself, assigns each group to a color. Six in each group. Each writer is required to read and make detailed comments on the other five members in his/her group and return those for the class as a whole to view. That doesn’t mean that they can’t read and comment on any writers outside their group—they certainly can and do—but these are their required reads. A few years ago, each class member had to read and comment on everyone else’s work in class, but it got to be too much for more than a few, so we’ve divided the class in two now. I’m the only one who reads and comments on everyone’s work.

What’s different about our class is that we don’t care about placating people’s feelings. We’re not mean-spirited, but our standards are based on helping our fellow writers create a publishable novel. We’re not there to make people feel good or to lavish praise on each other. If praise is warranted, they’ll receive it, but our biggest focus is on what isn’t working and how to fix it.

This is the reason I formed this group several years ago. I’d taught in various universities and other venues, both online and on site, including the UCLA Writer’s Program, the University of Toledo, Phoenix College (the “real” college, not that internet pretend school you see on billboards), St. Francis University, Trine University, the New York Writer’s Workshop, Writer’s Digest Online Classes, Vermont College, and other venues. The reason I quit and opened up this class was that every one of those venues required their teachers to practice the “sandwich” method of teaching. Put simply, you were to provide a bit of praise (the bread), a piece of criticism (the meat), and then another bit of praise (more bread, ala the sandwich method. I simply couldn’t do it any longer. The truth is, often there is nothing to praise and I had to make up something. Mostly to salve their feelings. And, to make sure they had a pleasant experience and would return to take another class.
 

I just couldn’t do it any longer. I kept seeing students who were no closer to being published than when they began and they kept clinging on to the bits of praise handed out with their sandwich as some kind of justification that they were “writing.” Well, many were writing… just not writing well.

It was then I realized that praising someone for bullshit wasn’t a kindness at all. If they didn’t know their writing wasn’t working, they’d never do anything to get better. And, by and large, many didn’t. Many were perfectly happy, sitting in a warm, fuzzy club that kept feeding them these sandwiches. Kind of like more than one local writer’s club. Most people didn’t want to tell others the truth, which often was… “Your writing flat-out sucks.” When you tell someone that, they have two choices. 1. Disagree, often violently. 2. Agree, and do something about it. I only wanted to spend time with that second group. When I first began the classes, I fully expected a huge turnover each new session. We had a class structure and philosophy that didn’t deliver sandwiches to the others. If a writer’s work sucked, we told them that. With no mincing of words. But… and here’s the big “but”—we didn’t just say it sucked; we told them why and we also told them how they could improve it. Don’t misunderstand—we don’t promote “formulas” or anything like that in class. We tell them why it wasn’t working and suggested how they could make it more publishable.

What happened was that I got a huge surprise. People didn’t quit. They forged on and enrolled in a second class. And third… and… Their books began getting published. It turns out people aren’t as thin-skinned as too often thought. It turns out there are a lot of people who actually want someone to tell them why they’re not getting published and offer them tools to actually find a publisher and see their work in print. Some do… quit, that is… but not nearly as many as I figured we’d get. Some truly tough writers, who didn’t believe that genius was the only requirement to see their books end up on bookstore shelves. Who knew that hard work, patience and attitude were just as important and maybe even more so.

Those early folks (some of who are still with us, four years later), created a name for our class. It has become “Les Edgerton’s Bootcamp for Writers.” And, it is a bootcamp. We don’t tolerate sissies or quitters or know-it-alls or needy folks. Just don’t have time for that kind of person. We welcome men and women who are willing to do the hard, hard work of becoming publishable writers.

Anyway, sorry to go on like this, but I’m extremely proud of the writers in our classes. And, I’d like to invite you to join us as an auditor. I wish I could allow everyone who wants to become a working member, but I can’t. But, I think I can safely promise you that you’ll be courtside to a class where you’ll learn an awful lot about how to write a publishable book. And, safely. The class won’t even know you’re there. And, then, if you like what you see every day, when one of those rare openings occur, you’ll have the first shot at filling it.

Class membership is $400. To be an auditor is only $50.00.

If you’re interested and would like to know more about it or to just sign up, just email me at butchedgerton@comcast.net.

Thanks for taking the time to read and consider this. I’m wishing you nothing but profitable writing this coming year. Like that brilliant philosopher, Red Green, says: “I’m pulling for ya. We’re all in this together.”

Blue skies,
Les

Diana Beebe and I meet up in Dallas at the DFW convention. Diana recently won a major writing contest and her work is being looked at by several prominent agents and publishers. She's a member of our class.