By Vicki Delany
In the past I’ve jokingly written that my friends and I have
been to a writers retreat at someone’s vacation home or cottage. I say jokingly
because although we might have good intentions to write, and we might even
manage to get an hour or two of work in, the real purpose is to read and walk
and swim and eat and drink and most of all talk. Fun, but not really an occasion for serious writing.
I had never been to a real
writers retreat until last weekend. I was invited to be the guest author at Turning
Leaves, a weekend retreat put on by the incredible author/editor/teacher/broadcaster
duo of Gwynn Scheltema and Ruth Walker of Writescape. (http://writescape.ca/site/)
As the guest author, my job was
to give a Saturday morning workshop on writing effective and realistic
dialogue, and leading a discussion on Friday night. Otherwise, my time was my
own.
The weekend was organized as a mixture
of free writing time and planned classes or exercises. Participants were
encouraged to do as much or as little private writing as they wanted. Some buried
their heads in their projects, others participated in all the group efforts.
I loved meeting the 12 enthusiastic, keen, and very talented
writers at different stages in their writing process. I sat in on some of Gwen
and Ruth’s creativity sessions and think I learned a thing or two. I got a lot
of writing done as well, and also spent some time thinking up ideas for a forthcoming
book.
It was great fun to start that process out loud, in front of a group at
the dinner table.
One of the highlights of the weekend was the meals. Yes, the food was good, but that's not what I mean. Simply sitting around the dinner table together gave everyone a chance to exchange news, discuss tricky plot points, get ideas for submissions, and learn some tricks of the trade.
One of the highlights of the weekend was the meals. Yes, the food was good, but that's not what I mean. Simply sitting around the dinner table together gave everyone a chance to exchange news, discuss tricky plot points, get ideas for submissions, and learn some tricks of the trade.
The retreat was held at Fern Resort, on Lake Couchiching, north
of Toronto. It was cold and rainy (it is November in Ontario, after all), but I
got in one nice walk in the woods. My
room overlooked the lake and had a fireplace, which was lovely. The food was fabulous!
All in all, I enjoyed the weekend very much, but what’s more
it gave me an insight into the concept of a retreat. I don’t have a busy life
outside of my writing, but many people do. These women were able to take three
days away from their families and their jobs to simply write and (perhaps most important
of all) talk about writing. They all
left inspired and eager to dive back into their writing.
I was too.
Vicki Writing (not exactly as shown) |
Vicki Reading (not exactly as shown) |
Sharing what "wisdom" I have at the fireside chat |
Giving a workshop |
I've never been to a writer's retreat. Not sure it fits my personality. But this one sounds quite nice.
ReplyDeleteIt was indeed a wonderful weekend, Vicki, thanks in no small part to you. Thanks for being so generous with your time and knowledge.
ReplyDeleteOh, your retreat sounded lovely! I've been on a couple and think they can be very stimulating, especially if you are in the right frame of mind. It sounds you were especially lucky though to have such good food ( always important!), in a good venue (I have to be comfortable!) at a lovely location. I am envious!
ReplyDeleteI wish I could have been there. I could use a nice writing retreat, and being around other writers does get the juices flowing.
ReplyDeleteI find retreats very useful, especially when I have a gun to my head (figuratively speaking), but I've never done one with other writers involved. Being in a hotel or a vacant house out in the woods can be very helpful in getting the creative juices flowing. Your event sounds like it was very well thought out and organized. Lucky you!
ReplyDelete