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The Writing Group Book: Creating and Sustaining a Successful Writing Group
 
 
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The Writing Group Book: Creating and Sustaining a Successful Writing Group [Paperback]

Lisa Rosenthal (Editor)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 1, 2003
In this insightful guide, more than 30 members of writing groups explain how and why they found a group to join or established their own, how they have kept their group flourishing, and what it has enabled them to accomplish—from simple self-expression to a lifetime of published work. Poets, playwrights, screenwriters, fiction and nonfiction writers, memoirists, and children’s writers share advice on how to give constructive critiques, manage difficult members, delegate responsibilities for maintaining the group, and keep meetings productive. Online groups, international groups, and women-only groups are represented, and a resource section details ways to market and sell finished work and how to parlay one success into a writing career.


Editorial Reviews

Review

". . .useful to groups in any stage. . .whether just starting out or well established. . .organized well and flows easily. -- Rachael Hanel, Womenwriters.net

"The Writing Group Book brims with useful information and anecdotes that are anything but dry." -- Writer’s Disgest

"Nuts-and-bolts assistance on how to start and sustain a successful writing group." -- Chicago Reader

"Presents hundreds of useful tips to help writers establish a writing group . . . accept critiquing . . . and have fun." -- The Woman’s Newspapers

"This book’s cheer is Write on! Read it and you will." -- Rita Mae Brown, author of Rubyfruit Jungle and Starting from Scratch: A Different Kind of Writers’ Manual

"This is a book for all of us. Write. It will make the sun shine and the rain bring flowers." -- Nikki Giovanni, poet

"[A]nticipates many of the reefs that bedevil the launching of a group and wise counsel on how to navigate them." -- Jeffrey Sweet, playwright and author of The Dramatist’s Toolkit and Solving Your Script

About the Author

Lisa Rosenthal is a professional editor, playwright, and the founder of the Chicago-based Playwrights Collective. Her many staged plays include Just the Sweet Stuff, ReTreaT, and Under Our Clothes. She is the author of A Dog’s Best Friend. She won the Tremaine Fellowship in 2002. She lives in Chicago, Illinois.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 236 pages
  • Publisher: Chicago Review Press (September 1, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1556524986
  • ISBN-13: 978-1556524981
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.5 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,107,296 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Most well-known for her work regarding autism and writers' groups, D.M. Rosner writes both fiction and non-fiction. Her stories and articles have appeared in the Dead Promises anthology, The Writer, the Writer's Handbook, and The Writing Group Book, among other notable publications.

Welcome to My World: Adventures in Raising a Child with Autism and The China Doll were inspired by the younger of her two sons, who is diagnosed with autism.

Ms. Rosner also runs AutismGear.com, for which she designs items to help spread autism awareness and ease interaction with those who do not recognize autism when they see it. She lives in Florida with her two boys.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Writers helping writers, December 17, 2003
This review is from: The Writing Group Book: Creating and Sustaining a Successful Writing Group (Paperback)
Here is a book so jammed-packed with tried and true ideas it will make you want to start a writing group if you are not already in one. It even tells you how. Excellent advice on starting, organizing and maintaining a writing group is shared by dozens of writers from all genres.

What they have in common is the need for feedback and encouragement from other writers. What they have learned is shared through these individual essays. Each includes "Favorite Resources" to share books, organizations, retreats and conferences, web sites, even writing exercises. Final chapters offer guidelines for public readings, publishing and marketing. There's something here for every writer.

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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Writing In Groups, August 5, 2006
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This review is from: The Writing Group Book: Creating and Sustaining a Successful Writing Group (Paperback)
Anybody who has ever been a member of a writing group knows how helpful and beneficial such groups are. They give you motivation to keep writing, serve as surrogate audiences so you know through the development process whether you're on the right track, and even provide you with the opportunity to socialize with people who have the same bizarre compulsion to translate thoughts into words. But anybody who has ever been a member of a writing group knows that it's very difficult to build and maintain a group. So here comes editor Lisa Rosenthal with some pointers.

This book is comprised of articles by members of writing groups from coast to coast, and even internationally. If you want to start a group based on a theme or genre, a group at work or at a recreational location, or even start an expatriate group overseas, this book is your ticket. There are articles on fishing for your first fellow members and articles on starting groups online. There are also articles on providing first aid for a group that's grown sick and wandered from its original goal, and even articles on how to tell when a group is past repair, and how to make a smooth clean break.

There are a few articles in this volume that aren't useful. The editor includes not one but two stories about the frustrations suffered by a group that decided to publish their own anthology, stories that feel more like water-cooler anecdotes thanuseful pointers. And one article, ostensibly about how to give good critique, seems focused more on giving lengthy excerpts from the author's short erotic story. These could have used a stronger editorial hand.

As the title indicates, the primary focus of the book is on Creating and Sustaining a Successful Writing Group. There's not much on finding where such a group might already exist. I for one would have liked some pointers on how to tell if a lively and thriving group might already be out there working, especially if you're not in a large city. Perhaps there will be something like that in the second edition.

Essentially this book is ideal if you want to start and maintain a writers' group. Most writers thrive in a group environment, producing better and more engaging work; and since many writers are solitary by nature, this book provides guidelines for how to get out of your writer's hobbit hole and work with your fellow artists. Though this book is far from perfect, it will help get you started and keep you moving in the right direction over the long haul. This book is a treasure for writers who write to be read.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Perfect Insight for Any Writing Group, May 11, 2006
This review is from: The Writing Group Book: Creating and Sustaining a Successful Writing Group (Paperback)
If you have decided to write for a living, brace yourself. You probably already know this life is at times lonely and often filled with rejection. One of the easiest ways to overcome these feelings is to gather some sympathetic writers around you and have a regular time to meet. As Lisa Rosenthal writes in the introduction to this excellent resource, "The first step is regularity. Meeting at a specific time and place creates deadlines and a community that members can count on, and as familiarity with each other's voice grows, the helpfulness of feedback increases, and members become more invested in each other's work."

Rosenthal has pulled together an amazing collection of essays from different types of writers and different writing situations. The book is organized into four sections. The first portion focuses on the basics such as starting a writing group whether face to face or online and with writers of different genres and experience levels. The second section emphasizes constructive critique and also teaches how to maintain a fruitful writing group in spite of conflicts and various other challenges. The third section provides various insights into why some groups flourish and other groups fizzle with loads of advice how to keep your group moving ahead. The final section gives different ideas on how to move the writing group to a broader level of visibility with publishing anthologies and sponsoring group events. Back of this book features some simple tips for specific groups like a playwriting group or how to market your work.

I've got many books on writing but I've never seen a singular book focused on this aspect of the writing life. You will find the different perspectives and voices refreshing in this book. It doesn't matter what type of writing group you'd like to begin, this book contains some collective insight and wisdom to help you pull it together.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
I BECAME A FAMOUS author at an extremely young age. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
good writing group, critique group, story circle, writing groups
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Favorite Resources, Anchor Books, Some Instructions, United States, Writer's Digest, Feral Parakeets, Cincinnati Writers Project, Dancing Ink Press, Judith Guest, Random House, Tuesday Writers, Writing Down the Bones, Bantam Books, Houghton Mifflin, Los Angeles, Memoir of the Craft, New Orleans, Shambhala Publications, Three Pigs, Vintage Books, Virginia Woolf, Iowa City, Paeonian Springs, The Elements of Style
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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