A Writer's Moment
A look at writing and writers who inspire us.
Popular Posts
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“Librarians and romance writers accomplish one mission better than anyone, including English teachers: we create readers for life - and w...
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“One of the great joys of life is creativity. Information goes in, gets shuffled about, and comes out in new and intere...
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“There was never yet an uninteresting life. Such a thing is an impossibility. Inside of the dullest exterior there is a drama, a comedy, ...
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A Writer's Moment: 'Property of the imagination' : “The English language is nobody's special property. ...
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A Writer's Moment: 'Information In; Creative Responses Out' : “One of the great joys of life is creativity....
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A Writer's Moment: 'Story ideas surround you' : “I always tell my students, 'If you walk around with your eyes and ears...
Thursday, April 23, 2026
A Writer's Moment: 'Somebody's daydream'
'Somebody's daydream'
“Treat
your life like something to be sculpted.” –
Larry Niven
Born
in Los Angeles in April of 1938, Laurence van Cott Niven has been a full-time
writer since the early 1960s, starting with a well-received short story “The
Coldest Place.” He’s built a reputation as the world’s leading
“Hard Sci-Fi” writer, especially for his worldwide bestselling series Ringworld,
winner of the Hugo, Locus, Ditmar, and Nebula awards. Not welded to one genre, Niven also is known
for including elements of Detective Fiction and Adventure into his
stories.
Niven’s is credited with “creating” several alien species, one of the best-known
being The Kzin, featured in a series of 15 books collectively called “The
Man-Kzin Wars.”
The
author of 54 novels (the most recent being Starborn & Godsons), he’s
also written several screenplays and television scripts, and dozens of short
stories, novellas and comic book stories.
Legendary Sci-Fi writer Arthur C Clarke called Niven his favorite author
– a key accolade in its own right.
“In
the world of words, the imagination is one of the forces of nature,” Niven said. “Everything starts as somebody’s daydream.”
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
A Writer's Moment: What first must burn inside
What first must burn inside
“I'm
just going to write because I cannot help it.” –
Charlotte Bronte
Born in England on this date in 1816, Bronte lived to just age 39 before dying of typhus during pregnancy. The oldest of 3 Bronte sisters who survived into adulthood (2 others died of tuberculosis), she and her surviving sisters Emily and Anne each wrote novels that are considered classics of English literature.
Her writing career formally began when she, Emily and Anne co-published a book of poetry under the pseudonym Bell – Charlotte as Currer; Emily as Ellis; and Anne as Acton. Their poems did not succeed but the three women’s subsequent novels – Jane Eyre from Charlotte; Wuthering Heights from Emily; and Agnes Grey from Anne – were wildly successful and led to their revealing their real names to the writing world. With an innovative style that combined naturalism with gothic melodrama, Charlotte’s writing especially plowed new ground.
Her remarkable lyrical style gave us such statements as “The soul, fortunately, has an interpreter - often an unconscious, but still a truthful interpreter - in the eye.” And “The human heart has hidden treasures, in secret kept, in silence sealed; the thoughts, the hopes, the dreams, the pleasures, whose charms were broken if revealed.”
“What you want to ignite in others,” she said of her hopes as a writer, “must first
burn inside yourself.”
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
A Writer's Moment: 'Fighting through life's travails'
'Fighting through life's travails'
“To
throw oneself to the side of the oppressed is the only dignified thing to do in
life.” – Edwin Markham
Born in Oregon on this date in 1852, Markham grew up in a broken home, worked
the family farm as a child, was mostly self-educated, and against the wishes of
his family (he was youngest of 10 children) decided to go to college and study
literature.
After
earning degrees in The Classics and teaching literature for several years, Markham
fell in love with poetry and began writing full time in his late
40s, the start of a 40-year career. His two most famous poems are "The Man with the Hoe,"
inspired by the painting by the artist Jean-Francois Millet, and "Lincoln,
the Man of the People," read at the dedication of the Lincoln
Memorial. The author of 7 poetry collections, he was named Poet Laureate
of Oregon in the 1930s when he also published his highly regarded Eighty
Poems at Eighty.
Shortly
before his death in 1940, he was named as the first recipient of the American
Academy of Poets Award for his “contributions to American literature and impact
on the poetic landscape.”
A
prolific letter writer and book collector, Markham amassed more than 15,000
books. He bequeathed them and his personal papers and letters,
including years of correspondence with Franklin D. Roosevelt, Ambrose Bierce,
and fellow poets Carl Sandburg and Amy Lowell, to tiny Wagner College in New
York City.
“Great
it is to believe in the dream as we stand in youth by the starry stream,"
he wrote, "but a greater thing is to fight life through and say at the
end, the dream is true!”