Online Writing Certificate > The Writer's Spotlight > Summer 2023

Summer Writer's Spotlight
In this Issue:
- Ask a Writer
- Recent Writing News: Students
- Recent Writing News: Instructors
- Feature Article: Kimberly Young
Ask a Writer
Our writing advice column features questions from our community answered by Malena Watrous and other creative writing instructors.A QUESTION ABOUT OPENINGS
- Giannina
Dear Giannina,
To answer this, I started by posing the question to a few novelists who teach in our program.
Sarah Stone responds:
Deborah Johnson has this to say:
And I will add to what they both wrote: You can't know the true/best beginning to your story when you're writing the first draft, because the true/best beginning will bookend in a meaningful way with where the story ends, and you won't know precisely how it will end until you write your way to that ending. So I would say: make your best guess, write a beginning that contains momentum and tension, and follow it until you get to the end, at which point you can and should go back and see if that's still the best place to start or not. I think it's much easier to revise the beginning once you've completed a full draft than when you're still in the middle or figuring out your story—and both Sarah and Deborah articulated versions of that same idea.
A QUESTION ABOUT MFA PROGRAMS
- Sarah
Dear Sarah,
Do you have questions for our writing instructors? If so, feel free to submit them to continuingstudies@stanford.edu for possible inclusion in our next quarterly Spotlight.
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Student Writing News
- Wendy Adair wrote in with this excellent news: "My book, The Broken Hallelujah, written through the OWC program, was awarded a 2023 Bronze medal for wartime fiction from the Independent Book Publishers Awards!
- Diane Byington writes to share: "I don't have a cover yet, but I'm super excited to announce that Louise and Vincent will be published on August 15. It's a novel about the last days of Vincent van Gogh and offers an alternative approach to how he died that is consistent with recent research! But even more than Vincent, you're gonna love Louise. Stay tuned!"
- Patricia Contaxis wrote to share that her essay, Little Gull, was just published in the journal Loch Ness Review.
- Debbie Jacob wrote in to share this cool news: "It was hard to imagine anywhere beyond the Caribbean island of Trinidad during the Covid pandemic when we had completely closed borders and lockdowns for nearly two years. Totally confined to our homes—except for sanctioned trips to the grocery store and pharmacy—my only contact with the outside world came when I joined Rachel Howard's online class 'Finding the Universal in the Particular.' My plan was to work on a memoir about my experience of facing retirement with a pack of retired police dogs. But then I got an idea. After Rachel's class, I rewrote my book about the 70-year history of the Trinidad and Tobago canine police. It seemed there was no book more particular than that, and I wanted to apply what I learned in class to explore 'aboutness' in the book to give it a universal audience. Much to my surprise, McFarland, the first and only publisher I approached in the US, accepted that book, which currently goes under the working title of Crime Bites. It will be part of McFarland's Dogs in Our World series, hopefully by the end of this year. I am a professional journalist and writer. My other books have been published in England and the Caribbean. Rachel's course opened up a whole new world of publishing for me in the US. As I told Rachel, 'If I can find a way to give such a particular story a universal appeal, then anything is possible.' I now believe any book has that potential."
- Kevin Loughlin, who took a class where students receive a daily prompt, wrote to share this: "I took The Creative Habit twice, back to back, last year and am proud to say that I never missed a single assignment, even optional ones, when we were on semester break. Your course accomplished its goal. I write something every day. Even if it is only a phrase I want to use or an idea for a story, I will jot it down on my phone. The Martha’s Vineyard Times published another one of my letters. You may recognize parts of it, as it has its genesis last year, as one of the assignments in your class." I loved hearing this from Kevin, and the piece he shared was beautiful.
- Simi Monheit has a new story, "Broken Glass," published in Lilith!
- Linda Moore's novel, Attribution, an art mystery thriller, won the National Indie Excellence Award for Literary Fiction! And then BookBub announced it had been selected as one of their $.99 deals, a promotion which can go a long way toward increasing readership. Way to go, Linda!
- Juli Min just sold her debut novel, Shanghailanders, at auction with publishers buying rights on both sides of the Atlantic! Here's a great article that goes into more detail about the sale of this magnificent manuscript. Congratulations, Julie!
- Elizabeth Mondry has a brand new essay published in Pangyrus.
- Leanne Ogasawara had a terrific new short story published in the Michigan Quarterly Review, which you can read an excerpt of here.
- Alyssa Lauren Stone had the cover piece in Shondaland recently. The essay started out as her Modern Love essay, developed in Melanie Bishop's class last July. It wasn't accepted at Modern Love but she kept working on it, and published a couple other short pieces, and then this one was accepted. This is a great lesson for all those aspiring writers who think a rejection from Modern Love is the end of the road.
- Jill Blocker's debut novel, What was beautiful and good, will be published this fall in German, titled Was schön war und gut. She developed the historical fiction novel during "The Past Is Never Past: Writing History-Based Fiction," with instructor Deborah Johnson. The novel, which follows a young singer at the beginning of WWI, will be showcased at the Frankfurt Book Fair in Germany. You can find more info on Jill’s website.
- Jaclyn Westlake wrote in to share the thrilling news of her upcoming novel publication: "My debut novel, Dear Dotty, in which a twenty-something struggling to fit in with her over-accomplished family and land a career where no one uses words like 'synergy' follows advice from her dead great-aunt—a globetrotting, martini-swilling nudist—through a series of revelatory emails about pursuing long-buried dreams rather than society's idea of perfect will be published by Avon Books (an imprint of HarperCollins) in summer 2024! I'm currently drafting Book #2, coming summer 2025!"
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Instructor Writing News




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Feature: Reflection from Kimberly Young

Kimberly Young was a student in my Novel 1 class many years ago, where I saw the first draft of the first chapter of her newly published novel, In The Event of Death, and immediately fell for her novel's premise and snappy prose. I had the pleasure of working with her on the completed manuscript as well, so I got to see how it all came together (brilliantly!) and was delighted when I found out that it had been accepted for publication.
Because we both live near Stanford, I was able to attend her book party, which was a joyous and fun event, full of her oldest and dearest friends and new fans. At this event, Kim gave a talk about what she'd learned in her Online Certificate Program in Novel Writing (OWC) classes that she applied to writing her first novel. I thought it was such a fabulous talk that I asked her if she'd be willing to share it with Spotlight readers, and the text follows. Congratulations, Kim!
How the OWC Helped Me Plot My First Novel
Immediately after my book, In the Event of Death, was published in February 2023, I gave a reading at Books Inc in Palo Alto. It was my first reading, and I'd been advised to read two or three short passages with a brief introduction to each section. It dawned on me that it might be illuminating to describe how lessons in the OWC helped me kick off my story and plot my novel.
As I explained to my audience members, one of the first things we learned was that our novel must have an "inciting incident." This event forces our protagonist out of his or her comfortable life through a one-way door into the unknown. For my protagonist, Liz Becker, the inciting incident is the Recession of 2008 that nearly shutters her business. Before the Recession, she and her partner, Gabbi, were successful event planners in Silicon Valley staging weddings in wine country, birthday extravaganzas, and splashy fundraising galas. But their phones stop ringing until a former client calls and asks Liz and Gabbi to produce a funeral for his recently deceased wife.
Planning a memorial with flowers, music, and food isn't that different from a wedding, right? The problem is, Liz has a "secret wound." She's had a crippling fear of death since losing her little sister in a childhood tragedy. As I learned in the OWC, the secret wound is a device that novelists use to add depth and complexity to a character's backstory. Liz has a husband and twin sons who depend on her income, so she must weigh her fears against the urgent need for financial stability. In short, the secret wound raises the stakes in a powerful way.
Another lesson in the OWC program focused on "world building." I shared with my audience that writing my first book had been a bit overwhelming as I juggled the needs to create characters, flesh out plot, build suspense, and craft dialogue. To simplify world building, I set my book in my hometown. "Write what you know" is sound advice and setting my book in the Bay Area allowed me to navigate my protagonist around town with confidence. (An added benefit is that local readers have enjoyed reading about their favorite cafes and parks, Stanford campus, and Silicon Valley.)
After reading a few passages related to the death of Liz's younger sister, I promised attendees that there were many lighter moments in my book to balance the dark chapters. One instructor in the OWC taught a class called, "I Laughed So Hard I Cried," where we explored the sometimes thin line between grief and comedy. This class sparked new ways for me to leverage humor to make the subject of death more palatable.
As I've told many of my readers, Stanford's OWC program gave me the blueprints for building a novel. Equally important, my teachers and fellow writers gave me the feedback and encouragement that enabled me to survive the rocky road to publishing. I'm so grateful!
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