Marion Roach Smith, co-founder of TheSisterProject.com, has taught a sold-out class called "Writing What You Know" since 1998. She is the author of The Roots of Desire: The Myth, Meaning and Sexual Power of Red Hair (Bloomsbury, 2005); co-author with Michael Baden, M.D., of Dead Reckoning (Simon and Schuster, 2001); and author of Another Name for Madness (Houghton Mifflin, Pocket Books, 1986).
She is a former staff member of the New York Times and has written for the New York Times Magazine, Martha Stewart Living, Prevention, New York Daily News, Vogue, Newsday, Good Housekeeping, Discover , and American Health. Marion has been a commentator on National Public Radio's All Things Considered, and writes and records daily and weekly spots on Martha Stewart Living Radio, Sirius 112/XM 157.
Smith (The Roots of Desire, 2006, etc.) helps kick-start the
writing process.
Everybody has a story to tell. Some people dream of putting their
stories in a book while others want to blog, write letters or
record family history. Smith, who is also a workshop teacher, gives
the honest nuts and bolts of memoir writing. She does not use
standard and stale exercises or prompts to fill the pages of this
slim volume, but rather a blend of anecdotes and unusual tips to
help would-be writers "vomit up a draft." What makes this guide
stand out from the rest is its complete lack of academic posturing.
Smith does not constantly drop famous names or drone on about
Paris. Instead, the author uses real, plainspoken examples from her
life and writing, such as the memorable story of her mother's
struggle with Alzheimer's. Seasoned writers should proceed with
caution: Anyone who has taken Composition 101 will have heard much
of this advice before, such as "write what you know" and "show,
don't tell." But readers looking for a push in the right direction
will find Smith's instructions highly accessible and inspiring. Her
first-person narrative style is breezy and friendly, and the
beginning lays out the three overarching rules for memoir writing.
Chapters have catchy subtitles, with easy-to-understand examples,
from how to choose a subject to style to editing. Other advice
includes a list of go-to reference materials and how to navigate
writing about sex.
Spare but practical resource for beginners--a good reference for
library programs or community workshops. --Kirkus Reviews
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