Mystery: June 11, 2025 Issue [#13176] |
This week: June, 2025: How We Write Edited by: Carol St.Ann 👓   More Newsletters By This Editor 
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1. About this Newsletter 2. A Word from our Sponsor 3. Letter from the Editor 4. Editor's Picks 5. A Word from Writing.Com 6. Ask & Answer 7. Removal instructions
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Hello. I joined WDC in September of 2006. My name is Carol St.Ann, and and I write for this newsletter once a month. This year, 2025, I plan to focus on the craft with a secondary focus toward publication. Please feel free to hit me up with any issues you’d like to see addressed, and I’ll do my best to research it for you. |
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My dear friend, Barb, and I enjoyed a rather wonderful conversation the other day, about how we write. It never ceases to amaze me, when I think of how many ways we can differ from one another, especially when we are so much alike.
She and I met on a message board, built in honor of a favorite TV series and immediately became admirers of one another. It was not so much because we liked each other’s point of view about the show in question, although we certainly did that. It was more because we connected to something in each other’s writing voice.
Even, all these years later, a favorite topic is our love of writing. We read and critique each other’s work to oft times hilarious outcomes. It has been a great ride thus far, and I hope it continues way into our old age.
Just recently, I shared bits of a story on which I am working and Barb expressed curiosity about how I write. We were both astounded, upon deep discussion, to learn how different our methods are. I would go so far as to say they are worlds apart.
Barb likes to formulate a story in her head and write it from start to finish. Something inspires her and she is off and running. She is able to tell the entire story right from the start. Rarely is the finished product different from her original vision. I find this stunning and amazing.
I, on the other hand, grab inspiration whenever and wherever it presents itself and write snippets. Mostly conversations or brief descriptions. Descriptions being a forlorn look or an outdoor scene. For me, they are the skeleton upon which I build my story. I weave the story around and through them. Like Barb, I am also able to tell the entire story right from the beginning. Unlike Barb, however, I rarely arrive at the original destination of intent. I often have to make a detour because one of the characters will get uppity and start to dictate, information I had no knowledge of until that moment. In these cases, I am always glad my story did not have a definitive shape beforehand. Barb finds this equally stunning and amazing.
What’s more, we have each tried, as a personal challenge, to write employing the method of the other.
We could not do it.
To take this a step further, we compared our little black notebooks. I have four. Barb has only one. Mine is a hodge-podge of random thoughts and passages with annotations, arrows, colored marks, references markers, circled selections, vocabulary notes, doodles, and drawings. Barb’s is neat and tidy with perfectly articulated thoughts and not a hint of rambling anywhere.
I wondered if our friendship had ever been real. 
Of course, once we recovered, we acknowledged there is no right or wrong way to write. It's an art. Some people are better than others. Some take the long way, some take the short way. Some type, some use a computer, still others prefer longhand. We all write for the love of expression. That is the tie that binds.
We understand each other's giddiness and the desperate need to share when we have a story formulating in our heads. Likewise, we know when the other needs solitude - and we know why. We know what it is like to love a character - even someone hateful. We understand that no matter how hateful a character may be, he or she came to being in the mind of the writer. We know how it feels to have a character hurt or be hurt. How one can become depressed in real life, even go into a kind of mourning when the story goes in that direction.
What a joy to share these things and know there is understanding in the heart of the beholder.
See you next month.
Carol St.Ann 
Remember to nominate great Mysteries
This month's question: do you have a writing protocol? How do you write?
Answer below. I do love me some feedback! 
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If you’ve got a mystery in your head:
Try out your mystery chops here:
A few good reads!
| | The Seed (ASR) A class assignment results in a tear-stained page. #2339382 by Cubby   |
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Have an opinion on what you've read here today? Then send the Editor feedback! Find an item that you think would be perfect for showcasing here? Submit it for consideration in the newsletter! https://www.Writing.Com/go/nl_form
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Responses to last month’s newsletter: “Sub”
DB Cooper writes:
I write in several sub-genres. Mostly, my interest is in universities and colleges. Universities have everything-a radio station, a TV station, a newspaper, a teaching hospital, police, libraries, student courts, restaurants, dormitories, theatre, sports, churches, ROTC, and even some grade schools so future teachers can get experience.
I think I found the ultimate sub.
Excellent idea. There’s no denying it.
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